They're not uncommon outside of Target. Sometimes they stand, but often times they sit on the curb, just by the exit doors that swing out as you walk through with your plastic bags of new purchases. Maybe it's a less hostile posture to be sitting so low, maybe they're tired in the central valley heat. Regardless, it means you have to look down if you're talking to them. That, or ignore them.
They're usually polite. She wasn't any different, and when I offered to take her in to buy her food, she was immediately grateful. (Tangent: I remember offering to take someone in once, but he said Target didn't allow him to go in, whether because he made people uncomfortable or because he freeloaded I don't remember. But I remember I had to say it was okay that because he was with me.) Her name was Debbie, and in all stereotypes I guess she looked like what you'd expect. Stringy hair. A face that looked like it hadn't been washed (it still strikes me that the streets can age a person, and I wonder what I'd look like if I didn't/couldn't wash my face), an oversized t-shirt a bit too worn in and clearly unwashed for awhile.
As we walked to the food court she chatted endlessly.
I'm not from here, you see. I'm from the Bay.
Oh where from?
Fremont.
My family's from San Jose, it's not far from there.
Oh yes. I went to Miller Middle School, do you know Miller? It's a great school. So I came here to get a fresh start, you know? But it turns out I moved into a bad neighborhood. I found out my apartment had cockroaches and rats and mice and they gave me two days before eviction and well here I am. My neighbors, they do drugs and I'm not into that. I've been clean for ten years (Do I doubt her? I have no reason to. Why does it matter? Why are we so distrustful of people with unkempt appearances?), and that sobriety, that ain't something you want to lose. I used to do that lifestyle until I realized there's gotta be more, you know? And I have a daughter and I gotta take care of her.
Do you have a place to stay tonight? (I think of my friends at the Rescue Mission. Is that un-dignifying to suggest? Then I think--how would they even get there? Systemic issues and circles that don't help each other...)
Oh yeah tonight we do. But it's hard you know...
She chatters on and somewhere in between we get a hot cinnamon pretzel, an Icee (That'd be really nice, I'm so thirsty. I'm so thirsty you know? It gets hot out there), and a hot dog for her friend outside (is he her husband? boyfriend? why does it matter to me?). A friend from school happens to be in the food court as well. In my head crosses the thought: I wonder what she thinks? And later when there's more space in my head and fewer words hitting my hears I think of the fact that she is a Christian too and I wonder what she thought about the whole thing.
And there are a lot worse people out there than me, I'm no way saying I'm the only one who's got it bad. There are a lot, a lot of people who have it hard too. But nice people like you who help out, I'm so thankful. I know there are people who ask for money and go spend it on drugs and I get that, I know people don't want to give to that (what's it like to know people are judging you?), but it's so nice when people help out. It really makes a difference you know.
Pray for us tonight, okay? It really makes a difference.
Yeah, yeah it does.
______________________________________
They're usually polite. She wasn't any different, and when I offered to take her in to buy her food, she was immediately grateful. (Tangent: I remember offering to take someone in once, but he said Target didn't allow him to go in, whether because he made people uncomfortable or because he freeloaded I don't remember. But I remember I had to say it was okay that because he was with me.) Her name was Debbie, and in all stereotypes I guess she looked like what you'd expect. Stringy hair. A face that looked like it hadn't been washed (it still strikes me that the streets can age a person, and I wonder what I'd look like if I didn't/couldn't wash my face), an oversized t-shirt a bit too worn in and clearly unwashed for awhile.
As we walked to the food court she chatted endlessly.
I'm not from here, you see. I'm from the Bay.
Oh where from?
Fremont.
My family's from San Jose, it's not far from there.
Oh yes. I went to Miller Middle School, do you know Miller? It's a great school. So I came here to get a fresh start, you know? But it turns out I moved into a bad neighborhood. I found out my apartment had cockroaches and rats and mice and they gave me two days before eviction and well here I am. My neighbors, they do drugs and I'm not into that. I've been clean for ten years (Do I doubt her? I have no reason to. Why does it matter? Why are we so distrustful of people with unkempt appearances?), and that sobriety, that ain't something you want to lose. I used to do that lifestyle until I realized there's gotta be more, you know? And I have a daughter and I gotta take care of her.
Do you have a place to stay tonight? (I think of my friends at the Rescue Mission. Is that un-dignifying to suggest? Then I think--how would they even get there? Systemic issues and circles that don't help each other...)
Oh yeah tonight we do. But it's hard you know...
She chatters on and somewhere in between we get a hot cinnamon pretzel, an Icee (That'd be really nice, I'm so thirsty. I'm so thirsty you know? It gets hot out there), and a hot dog for her friend outside (is he her husband? boyfriend? why does it matter to me?). A friend from school happens to be in the food court as well. In my head crosses the thought: I wonder what she thinks? And later when there's more space in my head and fewer words hitting my hears I think of the fact that she is a Christian too and I wonder what she thought about the whole thing.
And there are a lot worse people out there than me, I'm no way saying I'm the only one who's got it bad. There are a lot, a lot of people who have it hard too. But nice people like you who help out, I'm so thankful. I know there are people who ask for money and go spend it on drugs and I get that, I know people don't want to give to that (what's it like to know people are judging you?), but it's so nice when people help out. It really makes a difference you know.
Pray for us tonight, okay? It really makes a difference.
Yeah, yeah it does.
______________________________________
I walk to my car and, as usual, my head is spinning. I even know I'm going to blog about it, because I always blog about things like this because it makes me think. I think of how she told me she goes to church and asked me to pray for them, but I didn't say much about God or Jesus. Did I bring the kingdom near to them? Should I have stayed longer to talk, to pray, to be deeper?
I think of feeding people and quickly conclude: Buying someone a meal is not justice.Feeding their physical hunger in five minutes then driving away is not justice, no more than giving someone money is. Justice is something more holistic, something deeper, something so right and not just something nice to do.
And I get into my car a little frustrated, because even though I let Debbie into my life it was but for a few minutes, almost just enough but stopped before I invested more deeply. But I am also confused because no one told me the next step after feeding someone and "getting to know" them and "treating them like human beings." No, in the interrupted moment that's all I seem to remember.
Next conclusion: It may not be full justice, but maybe that's it for this time in my life. Maybe, like the parable of the talents, I will be faithful to responding in this small way of bringing her into the food court. Maybe it's part of Shannon's commitment--Allowing my life to be interrupted by those in need (sub the poor, the oppressed, the hungry, the widowed, etc). If nothing, I pray that this keeps my heart soft, so whenever the next step (establishing friendship? serving as a voice?) comes, I will be listening. And these thoughts that flow through my head (why do I feel the need to judge them? why do I notice the people who notice me with her? what else does she need...I can't tell?) won't be new, but maybe there will be answers next time.
After all this is a journey, a long long journey. I remind myself that never on this earth will we reach complete justice, but that doesn't mean Jesus doesn't move us closer to his heart. And if taking someone into the food court is how he is asking me to be faithful for now, I will do it. If that is all I can comprehend about how to love a hungry stranger, then at least I will do that and not ignore that need with a, "but that doesn't solve the real issue" (funny, same reason people use for not giving them money). I only pray that this is just one more step in such a deep issue. And maybe some day I will know what else to do after the pretzel and the Icee.
Small steps. Faithful steps. Humble steps.With what shall I come before the LORD
and bow down before the exalted God?
Shall I come before him with burnt offerings,
with calves a year old?
Will the LORD be pleased with thousands of rams,
with ten thousand rivers of olive oil?
Shall I offer my firstborn for my transgression,
the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?
He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.
And what does the LORD require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly with your God.
-Micah 6:6-8