There is
a homeless man living at my local library.
I began piecing the clues together about a year ago: the rickety white
sedan with a backseat stuffed with clothing that was always in the same parking
spot, and the quiet man, dressed in clean but threadbare clothing, with swollen
sandal-clad feet, who was at the library day after day. One day, as the library closed, I saw this
man walking slowly to the old white car and get in. The pieces clicked together.
I suppose, if you weren’t a regular
at the library, you might never realize.
The neighborhood that my library is located in is extraordinarily
wealthy. I used to go for runs here,
watching as vans full of gardeners and maids parked on the streets, entering the
huge homes to work long hours so that the owners can return at the end of the
day to a fairy-tale home. And here, in
the library, a homeless man is found, hidden from sight.
Even now, I hesitate to write about this man, out of fear as to what might happen to him should people put together the pieces. The way we treat the homeless in this country - criminalizing and stigmatizing people who are already down on their luck - says a lot about who we are as a nation. There was also a homeless man that rode my morning bus, always getting on at the same spot and exiting at another. In this case, I could identify him as homeless both by the sign he carried as well as the odor. The others who rode the bus with me - most of whom had been riding the same bus for years - treated him with a certain wary distance. No one said anything against him. No one said anything to him. What I usually thought about was just how distressing it would be to go through life with no warm bed and no access to a proper bathroom.
A few months ago, I read the book "Another Bullshit Night in Suck City This memoir, which was later turned into the movie "Being Flynn," deals with the author's relationship with his father, who turned up at the homeless shelter he was working at. Nick Flynn writes of the instability that pushed his father into homelessness, as well as the instability that he himself inherited from his father. He also writes of simply working in a homeless shelter, as he sees all of the people that fall through the cracks of our society, whether by hard luck or illness.