Last Resort

October 15, 2004

Road Less TraveledAs I coasted off the high­way and came to a halt at the light, there was a hitch­hiker hold­ing a card­board sign with his dog chained to a sign­post. The man, who looked to be in his mid-30s looked worn out and tired, his expres­sion reminded me of a pro­pa­ganda poster for hunger depre­va­tion. The sign’s mes­sage, painted with shoe pol­ish or a vari­ant of, read:

On the road. Need food, help or transportation.”

The man walked the side­lines, inch­ing closer to the line of cars wait­ing for the light to turn green. As he approached my car my first instict was to look away, ignore his pres­ence and for­get about the issue at hand. Imme­di­at­edly I started form­ing my own thoughts of his sit­u­a­tion, com­ing to the con­clu­sion that he was either a trav­eler with a lot of hard­ship or a con artist scam­ming money from those will­ing to donate to his cause.

I glanced over at his com­pan­ion, chained to the sign­post, itch­ing his feet and wrin­gling in the grass. The dog, a yel­low labrador, looked clean and hap­pily wagged its tail and jumped up and down excit­edly as cars passed by a few feet away.

As I pulled way from the scene I felt bad for the man and his dog and won­dered what their story was. What led them to the point where a makeshift sign was their last resort, and who, if any­one, would be will­ing to help? 

6 comments

I was faced with a sim­i­lar sit­u­a­tion about 6 months ago on a trip to visit my fam­ily. I picked up my lit­tle sis­ter and headed to Jack­sonville. When pulling off a high­way onto the ramp, at the end I had to stop at the light. To my left, I see a girl, maybe in her mid 20’s, clearly home­less, with a dog at her feet. She had a sign that said she could use water or $5.00 to get a meal for her and her dog. When I was try­ing to think whether I should give or not, my sis­ter handed me a $20 bill to give to her and the rest of her water. My sis­ter is going to Uni­ver­sity of Florida, can barely pay the bills on her own, yet still man­aged to give to a total stranger. It made me real­ize what a woman she is becom­ing, and made me really proud.

I have been home­less once. I ran away from my dad to avoid his self-destruction with alco­hol when I was in high school. I ended up drop­ping out, and going up north to Min­nesota to stay with a friend. That didn’t work out, and next thing I know, I’m liv­ing on the streets with no money. I man­aged to get by every­day, and it was only the beg­ging of my fam­ily to come back that made me leave the streets. I was home­less and slept in the streets for 4 months, and I learned a lot dur­ing that time. I was too proud to beg for help, but a few more months on the streets, and I’d break down and beg for change or scraps too.

by Matt Burris on October 15, 2004 at 11:22 am. Reply #

I only give home­less peo­ple money if their signs are witty.. I once had a guy on Coro­n­ado beg for money with a sign that said “I can’t get it up, need money for via­gra.. Please donate”. My navy pal and I laughed so hard we had to donate.

By the way Erik, I think I read this story before haven’t I? I could always start writ­ting some stuff if need be since you may not have time.. (Like hon­or­ing Christo­pher Reeves/Rodney…::cough::) Justa thought.

by Matt (brother) on October 15, 2004 at 12:04 pm. Reply #

Matt: Great story. I think we’ve all shared sim­il­iar expe­ri­ences deal­ing with these kinds of prob­lems in soci­ety. In fact I did a report for col­lege that dealt with the invis­i­bil­ity fac­tor, wherein soci­ety lit­er­ally turns a blind eye towards the home­less think­ing that might solve the problem.

Matt (brother): You’ve read this before, but I cleaned it up and posted it anew for read­ers that might not have read this. To me this one of my best arti­cles, poignant and poetic. I don’t do it often, but some­times I like to pull past arti­cles and post them, because at one point this site was only a por­tal for other links — more or less a link blog. Over­time it has evolved into some­thing else and there­fore I feel some arti­cles writ­ten sev­eral months ago fit into the over­all scheme of things, if that makes any sense.

Now that you have the pass­word, feel free to post.

by kartooner on October 15, 2004 at 12:15 pm. Reply #

I live in St. Louis, Mis­souri and home­less­ness and/or beg­ging is a daily thing for me. I usu­ally don’t help unless my spirit tugs me to do so. Mostly, the only times I turn the per­son down is if I feel that they are sim­ply mooching, or if they are clearly alco­holic and plan on buy­ing liquor with the cou­ple dollars.

There is a par­tic­u­lar 30-ish year old woman who waits for the bus out­side of the hos­pi­tal I work at. She has no sign­board, and noth­ing about her makes me think she’s men­tally chal­lenged. All she does is rudely screams out “DO YOU HAVE SOME CHANGE?!?” I used to pass her every­day with­out know­ing she was a beg­gar. She screamed for some change from me one day and I was com­pelled to give her some­thing. While I reached in my pocket, I noticed her still look­ing for poten­tial givers. With­out even acknowl­edg­ing what I was doing for her, she yelled to a young lady who was walk­ing past me.

LADY, DO YOU HAVE SOME CHANGE?!?“
HEY! LADY! DO YOU HAVE SOME CHANGE?!?”

This proved to me that she was sim­ply look­ing for money, and not for peo­ple to help her. I gave her the money that I had and I con­fronted her about her approach. “You know, you shouldn’t expect peo­ple to help you if you talk to them like that,” I said. Her reply was “well, I was just ask­ing her for change.” I sin­cerely told her “May God bless you,” and went on my way.

by Fernando Dunn II on October 15, 2004 at 12:20 pm. Reply #

If I can spend 40 bucks on a pair of jeans I really don’t need, I can surely spend 5 bucks on some­one who looks like he/she could do with a meal.
Totally depends on what I can afford — been through a time where every buck counted, I couldn’t pos­si­bly give some­one 5 bucks. Maybe a buck would be ok, but 5 bucks was MY meal back then.
If that per­son gets alchohol instead of food with my 5 bucks, I think he/she’s get­ting the bad karma, and not me.
I try to give when I can. All the good karma just comes around some day.

by Arup on October 15, 2004 at 2:38 pm. Reply #

I usu­ally fre­quent dive bars where the drinks are hard, cheap, and well, that is all I need. Any­way, most of these places have to buzz you in because of homeless/crazies/crackho prob­lems. My soon-to-be lawyer friend invited a bum who had snuck in for a drink at our table, just to let the poor bas­tard warm up a bit. The bum got kicked out, but hell, he knew it was com­ing, and was glad for our company.

Same bar, dur­ing the sum­mer: another friend got hit up by a crack ho as she jumped the fence to the out­side deck. Gave us a whole song and dance about how her old man beat her up and she was try­ing to get enough money to take the Grey­hound to Des Moines, IA, to get away from him. Now, my wife (the social worker-I-go-to-court-for-meth-mothers-to-testify ther­a­pist) and I were both ready to say, “Really, well, let’s escort you to the police sta­tion up the street where they can pro­tect you (you don’t really think we’ll believe this crap).” My friend how­ever, who had his wal­let in plain view, ripped it open and gave her a fiver. When she left, I asked him why he did it? Best answer ever: he said it was on her to do the right thing, and if scor­ing was what she did with the money, then karma’s a bitch, and God won’t be happy neither.

That still cracks me up.

by max on October 16, 2004 at 1:21 am. Reply #

Leave your comment

Required.

Required. Not published.

If you have one.