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Why I gave a guy a dollar

Posted Jul 16 2008, 12:31 PM by Donna Freedman
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As I walked home from doing errands on Monday, I saw an older man standing near the entrance to a shopping center parking lot. He looked wrinkled and weary and underfed, and he held a cardboard sign: "Homeless, anything will help." I put a dollar in his hand and said, "Take care of yourself. I wish it could be more." He replied, "God bless you."

Then a silver SUV roared up, sunroof open to let the summer rays strike the male pattern baldness within. The driver wore pale blue sunglasses so I couldn't see his eyes, but I could read the sneer on his face. "Sucker!" he yelled as he drove by.

Maybe I am a sucker. I didn't know the backstory of the man to whom I'd given that dollar. He could have been a drug addict or a Level 3 sex offender.

He could also have been a disabled veteran, a downsized executive, a laborer who aged out of his profession, an uninsured guy who lost everything after catastrophic illness.

His past didn't matter to me. His present did: He was a human being in need. I had a dollar to give, so I gave it.

Scam or true need?
When I got home I told this story to my daughter. She observed, "He was driving an SUV with gas almost $5 a gallon and you're the sucker?"

I laughed, but brooded about the incident for the rest of the day. While waiting for the bus I've heard remarks about a guy who regularly works a corner in my neighborhood. The tenor of those comments, too, has been, "What a scam."

Later I looked at the "Do you give money to homeless people?" thread on the Women in Red message board. Some of the respondents were harsh, calling beggars "bums" or suggesting that "most panhandlers are too lazy to get a job."

I'm disheartened by generalizations like "most panhandlers." How can we know what "most" of a group is or is not?

Hardening our hearts
Of course it's possible that some do this instead of looking for a square job. You may even read an occasional news story about "affluent beggars." But I'm skeptical that people routinely make big bucks doing this. I also wonder how many people would choose to stand outdoors in all kinds of weather with no guarantee of financial return.

Of course it's possible that some beggars are drug addicts or alcoholics who refuse treatment. You might feel that you cannot in good conscience help that person kill himself. I can understand that, because there's alcoholism on both sides of my family.

However, it's also possible that the man or woman holding the sign is not that different from you. Maybe he got laid off, fell behind in his rent and had nowhere to go after being evicted. Maybe she went broke beating cancer, only to find that no one will hire her now.

Maybe this could happen to any of us -- and maybe that's why we're hardening our hearts.

Helping or harming?
Whether to give directly to panhandlers has long been a contentious issue among charities and homeless advocates. Depending on whom you ask, cash money either enables addicts or keeps poor people alive while they wait for a job, housing assistance or mental health counseling.

Sure, the money I gave might have gone toward feeding that man's addiction. It might also have gone toward the Dollar Menu. I have no way of knowing.

What I do know is this: The guy who called me a sucker did so from the confines of a pricey vehicle. He didn't slow down long enough to look into the beggar's eyes.

I did. I got a very strong vibe of hopelessness, as though this man were starting to forget that he was a human being.

How much can I afford to give?
Our uncertain economy will affect how much spare change people can spare. Some of the Women in Red respondents noted that they're barely making ends meet themselves -- they can't afford to give.

Technically, I shouldn't be giving either. Several family members are elderly, have chronic health conditions or are economically squeezed. They could use my help. More to the point, I'm 50 years old and a full-time student who’s employed only part time. Shouldn't I be tending my own yard before anyone else's?

Of course I should, and do. But once my basic needs are met and I've put something aside for the future, there's still money left over. Some of it goes to family and some to strangers on the street.

I can't save everyone. There comes a point when I have to say, "I'm sorry, I've given all I can afford to give today." I don't know the answer to hunger or homelessness, but I can't pretend that it has nothing to do with me. I can't close my eyes to need.

Comments

 

Personally, I hate giving cash to people on the street.  Primarily because I am already giving in the form of public services paid with tax money to provide food, shelter, and help finding a job, and eventually get them back on their feet.  I feel like if I just give them cash, then I'm essentially discouraging them from using those services.  

In this case, I think the act of giving cash is a relatively selfish thing to do because all it does is assuage your own guilt rather than putting them on a path towards improving their situation.

What I will do is give them whatever food I have...

WOW!  What a group of very nice, giving individuals.  How refreshing to read their (mostly) well written  comments instead of the trash writing often seen in spaces such as this.  Y'all get an A+!

Amen, wealthy_1.  I don't have much spare cash, but I try to donate to local food banks and knit blankets and scarves and stuff for another local charity that hands them out in the wintertime here.  Although it's often said (and people tire of hearing it), no one seems to face up to the fact that it could be anyone at any time that falls on hard times.

I would rather be a sucker than ignore a person who may be in need.  I have given money and food and drinks to people begging on the streets.   Judging by how grateful and excited the food and drinks made people, I have to trust that they were genuinely in need.    As for the people who received money from me...I don't know what they did with it.  I hope they used it wisely.  It was worth the risk.  The tables can turn quickly in life, and I would hope that somebody would take a chance on me if I ever needed help.

While giving directly to someone may make you feel good, I think in all honesty giving to an organization that helps people on the streets would probably be more beneficial.

Just like analyzing your own personal finances can help you make better choices with your money, giving to an organization like United Way or your local mission can help multiply your charity. These organizations can often leverage funds and secure grants to turn one dollar given into much more, which helps the other organizations and programs they support. When you give a homeless man a dollar, that's all he gets. When you donate to a charitable organization that supports the homeless, they can turn your dollar into a meal, a safe place to sleep, or a warm shower.

Is it considered any less generous to turn a critical eye toward making our charitable contributions work just as hard as the money we keep for ourselves?

I remember taking a trip to Chicago several years ago.  My family and I were walking from a restaurant to our hotel.  A painfully thin man in raggedy clothes asked my sister if she was going to use the doggy bag she was carrying.  She handed it over, and tears were brought to my eyes at how grateful the man and the small boy with him were to have a few leftover slices of pizza.  I don't give cash on the streets, because I work in a very rough neighborhood where, frankly, it's a safety issue.  But I do try to make donations to organizations that help out.  I will never forget that man, and how it's easy to help out.  

And the jerk in the SUV? I just don't get it.  Why the hostility?  If you don't want to donate, don't.  Drive on.  

Thank you for your kind words.  I too have difficulty deciding to give to people with signs asking for help.  I lived in a resort town and they hold them up that say "why lie, I need a drink."  

I was told to contact a local shelter and get tokens for the equivalent of cash they can use for necessaties that are given out there, but some people are too proud to go to those places and lived under our bridges instead.  One even refused my offer of cash because of fear others would steal it from them.  My sister goes so far as to put her unwanted fruit or chips into clean ziplock bags for those who may be searching for food in the trash.

Although giving bags of food is an option, ( my friend gave a guy a bag of baby carrots to munch as he left the grocery)  I think as a community, we are the ones who benefit from random generosity to strangers.  It fosters faith in a better tomorrow.  With the economy the way it is, we should all realize, "but for the Grace of God, go I" .  It doesn't take much to show people someone cares about them regardless of their appearance or circumstances and that they are not invisible.

Mark me down as a sucker.  If I give to to 9 that are a scam and only one that really needs it --- The one is worth it.

Where I live, we have a whole bundle of homeless and I have been blessed enough to be able to help them out...one of my clients (I'm a consultant) is even a non-profit that helps homeless and addicts.  That said, at the advice of several people who know far more than I, I refuse to give any of the homeless people any actual cash.  Instead, I offer to buy then lunch and have even brought a few of them out to my several acres of property to do some work for food and such.

Why do I do this?  Well, many (definitely not all) of the people begging for money are addicted to one thing or another.  Simply giving them cash would be feeding that addiction where actually feeding them food or giving them a job ensures that what I do give them goes to provide for their needs.

I've had mixed reviews from the homeless population regarding this.  Some are extremely grateful and some are just plain angry...I even had one yell at me because he said that he just wanted the cash so he could get high.

I would think the best way to know where your money goes is to ask the person what they would like to eat and buy them actual food instead of putting cash in their hands and not knowing where it's going.  Or surprise them by walking right past them, but returning in a few minutes with a burger, fries and a soda for him/her.  You're sure to know where your dollars went!

I'm sorry. You are a sucker. You were had. You were taken. You were bamaboozeled. Don't ramble on for 5 paragraphs trying to justify it or make yourself feel better. Just admit your mistake and move on. you are not a bad person...you just made a bad mistake.

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