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After Cancer She Started Driving Uber, Using Tips to Make Sandwiches For the Homeless-Now a 24-yo Rider is Her BFF

After Cancer She Started Driving Uber, Using Tips to Make Sandwiches For the Homeless-Now a 24-yo Rider is Her BFF
Kerry Wiles and Ryan Caldwall have been making and handing out meals to the homeless community in Tennesse while on Lyft and Uber drives.

Not only does Kerry Wiles hold down a full-time job as a scientist; on weekends, she works as a ride-share driver who uses her fares and tips to make meals for Tennessee's homeless community.

Kerry began her side gig with Lyft and Uber after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2018. She loves people, and thought the job could be a great way to know the stories of others.

Along the way, she began using her ride-share earnings to make lunches for the city's large and growing homeless population.

As she drives people around the city, on Saturdays and Sundays she's able to drop off homemade PB&Js to around 100 homeless people.

CHECK OUT: Bride and Groom Didn't Just Donate Wedding Food To Homeless, They Dished it Up On Their Big Day

These days, this is no one-woman sandwich delivery operation. Early on in her side gig as a driver, Kerry-who works Mondays to Fridays as a scientist at the Cooperative Human Tissue Network at Vanderbilt University Medical Center-gave a lift to a 24-year-old local named Ryan Caldwell.

Caldwell felt just the same way. "She's been my best friend since we started," he told News Channel 5.

Now the friendly pair go out delivering turkey rolls together.

"If anyone out there needs a young man to be a role model, he is it," says Kerry. The world definitely needs more ‘Ryans!'"

To learn more about the initiatives the kind pair have taken on, head to Nashville Homeless Helpers.

Kerry began her side gig with Lyft and Uber after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2018. She loves people, and thought the job could be a great way to know the stories of others.

Along the way, she began using her ride-share earnings to make lunches for the city's large and growing homeless population.

As she drives people around the city, on Saturdays and Sundays she's able to drop off homemade PB&Js to around 100 homeless people.

CHECK OUT: Bride and Groom Didn't Just Donate Wedding Food To Homeless, They Dished it Up On Their Big Day

These days, this is no one-woman sandwich delivery operation. Early on in her side gig as a driver, Kerry-who works Mondays to Fridays as a scientist at the Cooperative Human Tissue Network at Vanderbilt University Medical Center-gave a lift to a 24-year-old local named Ryan Caldwell.

Caldwell felt just the same way. "She's been my best friend since we started," he told News Channel 5.

Now the friendly pair go out delivering turkey rolls together.

"If anyone out there needs a young man to be a role model, he is it," says Kerry. The world definitely needs more ‘Ryans!'"

To learn more about the initiatives the kind pair have taken on, head to Nashville Homeless Helpers.

This isn't the first time Kerry has gone out of her way to help others. We wrote about the ‘secret society' initiative she founded to help struggling kids back in 2017.

For Kerry, helping others is no struggle. She says, "Small steps in a larger problem can make a beautiful impression on your heart and soul."

(WATCH the video featuring Kerry and Ryan's story below at News Channel 5.) 

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