This
past Saturday my mother and I went to go volunteer at a homeless shelter in
D.C. to serve food to the homeless. As the homeless people began to come into
the building I never thought I would see so many homeless people in my life
fill up a whole cafeteria. I mean I have volunteered at a homeless shelter
before but this place was extremely crowded of homeless people more than I have
ever seen.
As I was
there I happy because I was doing something constructive and giving back to the
community, but when I saw all those homeless people hurrying in just to get a
plate of food made me really sad. I looked at all these people and thought to
myself, “That use to my family and I” and I know exactly what half these people
are going through and dealing with this struggle.
What
broke my heart the most while I was there is when we ran out of food to give to
the homeless people. As more came in the door we had to say “We have no more
food to serve.” It hurt me because every single person who walked in there just
walked into the shelter just wanted a nice hot meal just like everyone else in
there to get through the day. The food we served was probably the only meal
that some of them actually at just to get the day. Just to imagine the homeless
people who didn’t get a plate broke my heart.
What
really caught my attention the most was that there were people of all ages,
from little children to the elderly. I knew just by looking at the little
children that they had no idea what was probably going on in their lives but I
knew that they were going to be effected in the future because they had no
stability in their lives at all. By looking at them and reminded me when my
family and I had to eat at a homeless shelter before.
Sometimes
in life you go through a struggle.
Wow. This was a powerful post. So as I read in the newer post to this, your mom is in a shelter, but at the same time she's volunteering to help at other shelters? She sounds like a very giving woman!
ReplyDeleteThanks for reminding us all that homelessness isn't just a "vagrant man" issue; families are more and more making up homeless populations. Can you find any statistics to support this?