Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Meet New York's 11-Year-Old Subway Therapist

IANS, 28 Dec, 2016 02:50 AM
    If you're in need of some emotional advice, but have neither the time or the money to waste on a qualified therapist, this 11-year-old kid has you covered. Ciro Ortiz has set up shop in a New York subway station, and for a measly $2, he offers five-minute "emotional advice" sessions.
     
    Every Sunday, Ciro Ortiz spends about two hours at the Bedford L subway station, sitting at a folding table with a cardboard sign that reads "emotional advice $2".
     
    Believe it or not, people actually do stop by for some pearls of wisdom from the "emotional advice kid". They ask him about all sorts of things, from relationships and career advice, to Donald Trump, and he does his best to help them find the answer to their problems.
     
    "I don't make much money," Ciro's dad, Adam, said. "One night he was just inspired to try an idea of how he could make his own. I was supportive of the idea and the next day we went into Williamsburg and set up the stand on the street."
     
    He was surprisingly popular with passers-bay, and he's been doing it ever since. On a good day, he'll earn about $50, but it's not just money that motivates him. Ciro was bullied at school in the past, and that inspired him to channel his entrepreneurial spirit in the makeshift emotional advice desk, rather than the much more popular lemonade stand.
     
    Plus, Ciro is apparently really good at giving people emotional advice.
     
    "Somebody came up to us and said that what he told her is what she'd been feeling in her gut that whole time," his father says. He was really nervous and unsure of himself in the beginning, but after a few Sundays, he started coming home saying 'I've met so many wonderful people. I'm gonna end up having so many friends,' his mother, Jasmine, recalls.
     
    "People ask about their relationships, about being confused in what to do with their life, or [...] Donald Trump," Ciro told Metro.co.uk. "I just tell them to look at the simplicity of their problem. To just find the simple answer, what do they NEED and the answer is usually simple."
     
    One pattern the 11-year-old has identified during his experience as an emotional adviser is that people seem to fear change. "They feel a certain way in the past and when they look [back] in hindsight, they say things were so much better back then," he told the New York Post. "We have to accept [change]. It's going to happen - it's always going to happen. Life is always changing."
     
    And in case you're wondering where the boy gets his wisdom for, he claims it's from his parents, who have always taught him to be kind to everyone and pursue his dreams.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    WATCH: This Cute Toddler Criticising PM Narendra Modi For Demonetisation Is Winning The Internet

    WATCH: This Cute Toddler Criticising PM Narendra Modi For Demonetisation Is Winning The Internet
    Cutest Critique Of Demonetisation So Far?

    WATCH: This Cute Toddler Criticising PM Narendra Modi For Demonetisation Is Winning The Internet

    How Santa Delivers Presents On Christmas Eve Explained

    How Santa Delivers Presents On Christmas Eve Explained
    The mystery of how Father Christmas can deliver presents to 700 million children in one night, fit down the chimney and arrive without being seen or heard has been explained by a UK physicist using Einstein's special relativity theory.

    How Santa Delivers Presents On Christmas Eve Explained

    An African Love Story In Which India Played Cupid

    An African Love Story In Which India Played Cupid
    I did not plan to fall in love when I left the DRC where I worked as a journalist with (state broadcaster) Radio Television National du Congo

    An African Love Story In Which India Played Cupid

    In Punjab, AAP Fights Within And Outside

    In Punjab, AAP Fights Within And Outside
    As the Punjab assembly elections draw closer, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and its leadership are grappling with a host of political skirmishes -- both within and outside.

    In Punjab, AAP Fights Within And Outside

    A Minimalist Holiday Season: How To Simplify Gift-Giving Without Being A Scrooge

    A Minimalist Holiday Season: How To Simplify Gift-Giving Without Being A Scrooge
    TORONTO — Rachel Jonat and her husband didn't purchase any Christmas gifts for their three sons when they were too young to understand the tradition.

    A Minimalist Holiday Season: How To Simplify Gift-Giving Without Being A Scrooge

    In No Cash Wedding Season, Indian Groom Gets Rs. 11, Guests Served Just Tea

    In No Cash Wedding Season, Indian Groom Gets Rs. 11, Guests Served Just Tea
    Mahavir Singh and his wife Gyano, residents of Nattoki madiya village in Greater Noida, organised the simple wedding of their daughter Sanju in Noida Sunday night.

    In No Cash Wedding Season, Indian Groom Gets Rs. 11, Guests Served Just Tea