by
Patti Dickinson
So we drove to the Plaza. The homeless man was on my side of the car, and my 15 year old daughter, Meghan, sitting behind me said, "I'll give it to him." Totally unlike her.....usually a quiet, reluctant kid. As she handed it out the window, with "Here's a cheese pizza!" he yelled, "Thank you....thanks....and God bless." We circled the block and found another homeless man on the median down the center of a busy street. My seventeen year old son, Andrew, said, "I'll get out." He bailed out of the back seat and ran across the street....handed the pizza to the man, had another brief exchange of words and bolted back toward our car before the light changed.
Quiet in the car. Meghan says, "Boy, that felt good." Agreement all around. Made me teary with the power of the moment.....one person can make a difference. One person at a time. We stepped outside our comfort zone. I didn't want this to be a cliche moment. How blessed we are....blah blah blah. We talk about that all the time. No, this time I wanted the kids to know that the homeless are often mentally ill, and what it must be like to feel the humiliation of standing on a street corner, with all your belongings on your back, wondering if you were going to get a meal that night. How the paradigm of the homeless is the here and now. Where I can sleep tonight, and where the next meal is coming from. No plans for a week from now. Their lives are measured in the next few hours.
1 comment:
This says alot about your parenting. Last night was an experience that your children will carry with them, and pass on to their children. Paying it forward is what life is about. Linda
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