Tom Read Wilson has spent years on our screens being the human equivalent of a warm hug, armed with a vocabulary that could charm the birds from the trees and a heart apparently made of 24-carat gold. But yesterday, one Instagram post from a woman called Sarah Jenkins turned Britain’s poshest receptionist into the nation’s collective crush all over again, and this time the tears are real.

Sarah and Tom have been best friends since they were four years old, growing up in a sleepy Berkshire village. Yesterday, on Tom’s 38th birthday, she posted a 10-photo carousel that detonated across the internet like a kindness bomb.

Slide one: a grainy 1991 Polaroid of tiny Tom in a waistcoat three sizes too big, standing on a chair to reach the microphone at the local old people’s home, belting out “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” while residents dab their eyes.

Slide two: a newspaper clipping from 1995, headline screaming “8-Year-Old Boy Raises £3,200 for Great Ormond Street by Singing in the High Street for 12 Hours Straight.” The black-and-white photo shows little Tom, voice already velvet, accepting a giant cheque while wearing a homemade cape that reads “Captain Kindness.”

Sarah’s caption is 400 words of pure devastation:

“I keep seeing people say ‘Tom is too good for this world.’ He isn’t. He’s exactly what this world needs, because he’s been this way since the day I met him. He once missed his own 10th birthday party because our classmate’s guinea pig died and he refused to let her cry alone. At 14 he spent every Saturday teaching drama to children with special needs, unpaid, because ‘everyone deserves to feel like a star.’ When my mum had cancer in 2003, Tom, aged 16, learned to cook cottage pie so he could bring us dinner twice a week without ever making a fuss. He still sends me a handwritten letter every month, even though we live ten minutes apart. The Tom you see on TV isn’t performing kindness. He’s just finally being paid to be the same boy who used to carry spare plasters in his blazer ‘in case someone fell over and needed courage more than antiseptic.’”

By the time viewers reached slide nine (Tom at 21, anonymously paying for an elderly neighbour’s heating bill by busking Christmas carols in the snow), the comments were a war zone of sobbing emojis and all-caps devotion.

The internet did what the internet does best: it lost its mind in the best way.

“I thought I just fancied him. Turns out I want to be his friend.”
“Captain Kindness is the origin story we never deserved.”
“Someone check on Anna Williamson, she’s been crying on her stories for 40 minutes.”
#ThankYouTom trended in the UK for 14 straight hours, beating the football.

Even the official Celebs Go Dating account posted a never-before-seen clip from the agency archives: Tom secretly learning the names and allergies of every single crew member on his first day, then handwriting dietary requirement cards for the catering team “so nobody ever feels left out.”

Sarah ended her post with a line that has now been tattooed, cross-stitched, and turned into phone wallpapers by thousands:

“He says the world taught him kindness. The truth is, he’s been teaching the world since he was old enough to speak.”

Tom, being Tom, responded only with a voice note on his own stories, voice wobbling: “Sarah Jenkins, you absolute rotter, you’ve made me cry in the Waitrose car park. I’m simply returning the love you all gave me first.”

Viewers are now demanding E4 give him his own show called Captain Kindness (petitions already at 87,000 signatures). Others want him knighted. A primary school in Surrey has renamed their annual charity day “Tom Read Wilson Day.”

One thing is certain: we thought we loved him before. Turns out we didn’t even know the half of it.

Happy birthday, Captain. Thank you for reminding us that real superheroes wear waistcoats and never let anyone fall over without a spare plaster, and a song to make the hurt feel smaller.