Last night we spent 3
hours constructing our beautiful cardboard dwelling into what is now
affectionately known as “the hut”. I’m actually quite proud of it; it survived
the beating of a full night of wind (note: this is Lethbridge wind, not
normal wind.) In fact, I was so proud of it that as I settled down to sleep I
almost felt bad. It was too nice! I sat there hoping that the conditions would
get a little worse or else this would be a pretty false experience.
Stupid me.
I woke up after an hour of sleep to the sound of buses
running ten feet away and my back in a permanently crooked position. Apparently
concrete floors and seven people crammed into a tiny space do not actually make
for a “nice” experience. But, like I said, our shelter did make it through the
night, so that was a relief. (When I heard the buses in the morning I genuinely
thought we were being steamrolled. I said my final words and made peace with
the fact that I was going out doing something I cared about.)
After some delicious donated coffee, we were out begging by
8am. For the most part, people’s reactions were good. Most apologized because
they didn’t have any change on them. I felt bad for the most part; I don’t want
this to be about guilt so much as a desire to be informed and help out. Some
were super kind and even if they didn’t have change would just stop to talk.
Others were jerks:
“Do you have any spare change?”
“Yup!”
“Sweet! Thanks.”“But I’d never give it to you.”
“Oh.”
OR
“Do you have any spare change?”
“I do, but if I gave it to you I’d be in the same position
you’re in.”
Really?? One dollar of pocket change is going to put you on
the street, Mr. IPhone with accompanying Bench jacket? I know that I said this
wasn’t about guilt, and I really try
hard not to judge people, but I judged that guy. I judged the crap out of that
guy. Him and the lady who had a phone conversation that was so obviously faked
that she turned around after she had passed and we acknowledged with our eyes
how incredibly terrible her attempt had been. Ten points for trying.
That being said, I had some really good experiences as well.
I wasn’t ever worried about having food because there were more than enough
donations. I like that our meals have become entirely communal; everything just
goes in a big pile and we take from it as we feel we need it. Between that and
sleeping within 2 cm of each other, I already feel really close with my fellow
participants. I know I could not do this on my own. Knowing that there is someone
else that can relate to a day full of wordless head shakes and avoided eye
contact is instrumental to my self worth. It’s hard not to take it personally,
so a reminder every ten minutes of why I am doing this is also key. I also had
8 different radio/tv stations ask me that question today, so that helped as
well. (PS, if you have access to a tv, can someone tape those for me? One of
the reporters asked me to look as pathetic as possible. I didn’t change my
expression and she said, “Great!” and took the picture. Sooo… I’m curious to
see just how pitiful I appear.)
Highlights of the day
were friends who came and brought me food and company. AND people who came up
and gave to us without us even asking. AND people who stopped to ask questions
and genuinely got excited for us. AND getting to wear a sandwich sign (with the
added bonus of not blowing away despite the wind’s best attempts). AND having
an awesome team.
I am now going to take my insanely windburnt face (I
definitely did not realize that 8 hours of standing in the wind could result in
excruciating pain) to my cold and unwelcoming sleeping bag and dwell on how people
are awesome. Cause they are. I just need to let myself remember that and suppress
the instinct to dwell on the few-and-far-between jerks.
Bring it Day 2.
2 comments:
you're killing it. i knew you would.
"One of the reporters asked me to look as pathetic as possible. I didn’t change my expression and she said, “Great!” and took the picture." ... HAHAHAHAHA. That's funny.
I'm excited for you, in this learning adventure.
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