Waiting at Pioneer Square in the morning for the Max to the
boonies, a guy is approaching each of us waiting there, holding up a book or
booklet. A Bible? Asking for directions to a landmark in his
travel guide? He gets a couple of “No”s,
shuffles towards me. Homeless,
obviously. Every physical attribute that
would suit a person for TV – regular features, gleaming smile, relaxed good humor,
eye contact, tailored clothes, voice of friendly authority, warm, charm,
physical grace – this man was missing.
“Excuse me,” he said, looking slightly past me. “I need five bucks to get into the shelter.”
He held the booklet close to my face and pointed to a yellow
highlighted section. The small print challenged my vision, but the man kept it
steady. Yep, there was City Ministries
at an inner Southeast address -- five dollars a night. I had time to grasp that the publication was
one of those free pocket-size handouts listing all the social services
organizations and emergency numbers in town.
Handing over a dollar, I said that panhandlers had been
hitting me up for money to get into a hostel at $35 a night.
“Fancy,” he said.
“How do you know you
can even get into this mission?”
“There’s lots of room.
I was there last night.”
What am I to think? That
a $5 a night flop is going to have guaranteed space? That this fellow is really going to spend my
morning dollar on an evening shelter? That
this dollar would be better spent on the lottery?
Doesn’t matter. Anyone
who begs money on the street can have my dollar, if I’ve got one. Sometimes I’ve said “Spend it wisely,” to the
receiver. No longer. Now I mutter “Spend it any which way you want.” It’s a token of the existence of human
kindness, which is not always practical.
The End