When I opened FaceBook today,
the first thing I read was a posting from my 24-year old daughter, which read:
YOU: Good!
ME: Packing my things and leaving.
ME: They are outlawing homelessness in Tampa by making it illegal to sleep in public.
YOU: Good!
ME: Packing my things and leaving.
I’d be packing, too. The post would be funny if the subject matter wasn’t homelessness. One can find a jerk anytime at the bar on the corner; who in their right mind wants to live with one?
We who are not homeless
really do have a moral responsibility to gain understanding about and show
compassion for those who are homeless. It is awful that some folks still
believe one becomes homeless because of "personal moral failure," as
if the scarcity of jobs and affordable housing hardly plays a part.
Back in the early 90s, there
was an average of 900 applicants for each blue-collar job opening, and,
precious few affordable housing units were being built then, or have been built
in the past 20-plus years. Today, things are much worse, with well over half of
our entire population jobless or, living paycheck to paycheck, precariously
close to becoming homeless. The
dire situation of homelessness is truly an indictment on our society we are
doing nothing to remedy. Heck, just taking away the tax break rich folks
get on their vacation homes could fully fund rent subsidies nationwide for
low-wage earners in need.
I feel a lot of compassion
for homeless people, and find difficulty in judging them for turning to drugs
and alcohol to numb their pain. I
think about just how much my mental health would be jeopardized if I had to
stand and walk around every waking moment, rarely finding a safe place to sit
or lie down, free from being looked down upon (and/or harassed) by passers-by and
law enforcement. How does that
Christian saying go, “There, but for the grace of God, go I?”
A friend recently shared a
story with me about her attending a public meeting where homelessness was the
topic of discussion. When a homeless man went to the podium to speak he asked
the audience to please stand, which they did. Then, he gave his talk and then
just turned and went back to his seat in the audience and everyone sat down. He
never explained his request for folks to stand while he talked, and hopefully,
those in the audience got it. The exercise offered a tiny glimpse into what it
must be like to struggle to find a safe place to sit, much less lie down and
sleep, in the community.
This daughter of mine has
always been a great person. While
a teenager in high school, she did an amazing thing that showed the content of
her character. Just having picked up some tacos for dinner, we were stopped at
a traffic signal when my daughter asked, “Mom, will you share half your food
with me?” I laughed at her while saying, “Yes, of course!” thinking she was making
some kind of joke. In the blink of
an eye my daughter let down the car window and handed over her food and drink
to a middle-aged homeless woman standing on the curb with a sign begging for
food. The woman was so hungry she immediately began unwrapping the food with
shaky hands and eating, not able to wait the little bit of time it would take
to walk away from the street and find a place to sit. The traffic signal turned
green for us to go a few seconds later. As I drove off, the homeless woman,
through tears of gratitude, shouted to my daughter over the noise of the
traffic, “Thank you!” I reached
over and handed one of my two tacos to my daughter, as tears began to well up
in my own eyes at her spontaneous act of kindness. We ate in silence and later
agreed: those were the best tacos we had ever eaten.
Yes, I’d say she would be
packing . . . if the scenario in her FaceBook post were about her.
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