Homelessness for Stupid People
The foibles of the most pampered homeless population in the Bay Area...
Someone posted to me that I should
blog about what I do for other people... this isn't going to be what
that person had in mind, not by a long shot. If I do do something
nice for someone, I'm not going to talk about it. Glory is never a
good reason to do someone a favour. Giving should never be done with
the expectation of reward on any level. Most parents understand
this... at least, I hope they do.
This column is not just for the
homeless. It's for everyone. But it is definitely for the homeless,
especially those who are truly trying. I'm hoping it's part of the
solution... maybe I'll find out someday... But I hope you read it
with your own life in mind...
Oh, and people (you homeless people
out there)... stop talking! Keep your mouth shut for a while and
listen. Many of you aren't very good at listening with anything but
your lips flapping... it's something a lot of you need to work on!
What I am going to talk about is
something of a lost art. It's an art that needs to make a roaring
come back...
Have you ever, in your life, been
speaking with two people, friends to you, strangers to each other,
and failed to introduce them? I have. It took me a very long time
to understand how rude a thing this is.
You may laugh, of course. I believe
it was some story involving some Southern Belle or another (maybe it
was Gone With The Wind) in which some woman told a man she
could not speak with him because they had not been properly
introduced. I cannot remember when I first heard of this, but I was
very young and it struck me, at the time, as being a ridiculous
evasion.
The problem is this: as I grew older
and realized that people truly do desire to make human connections
(at least, normal people desire that). A proper introduction is one
of the best gifts you can give. Humility, shyness and embarrassment
are barriers a Proper Introduction overcomes.
For the homeless, and for, I am quite
sure, many other circumstances, proper introductions can make life
easier. Bob and Donna McKenzie who work the Warming
Centre every evening it's open, understand this instinctively.
They make sure each new person that comes in is introduced to those
who can help the most amongst their fellow homeless.
An introduction will let people know
if they can be comfortable with this new person. It is an invitation
to attempt conversation, and conversation breeds comfort.
It also accomplishes something else
very important, especially amongst the homeless. It allows people
who may have difficulty with social graces develop those necessary
skills.
If you think that's hyperbole,
consider this: how many people do not get a job because they lack
social graces? Hmmmmm?
The more people one has contact with,
the more feedback they will get as to what is and is not acceptable.
Just an aside: I told a friend today that she raised her voice
inappropriately... she said she was thankful and asked me to continue
doing it. That just happens to be something I strongly believe a
real friend will do. Honesty and trust are important between
friends. Brutal Honesty delivered well is equally important. (In
case you didn't notice, brutal honesty is a running theme in this
blog...)
A proper introduction offers comfort
to those around you. Introducing that guy to that girl might not
seem like a big deal to you... but it may be for them! Introducing
that business man to that guy who's looking for work... introducing
that kid to that font of seemingly useless information... Introducing
anyone to anyone... do it, sit back, and watch what happens!
Before I go on, I have to define what
I mean when I say “Friend.” A friendship, a real one, is based
on trust and respect of the highest order. A friend is someone you
bounce ideas off. It's someone with whom you share events in your
life. It's someone who shows you patience, understanding and gives
you feedback based on what you tell them and how much trust you show
them. Friendship is a very vulnerable state to be in. If you've
ever had a friend, or someone you thought was a friend, betray you,
you'll understand this.
Imagine (and some of you do not have
to) that your friend is a former lover, ex spouse, or someone very,
very close to you of the opposite sex (or not, if you're of a
different persuasion). Suddenly you meet that very special someone
who you fall madly in love with. You may find yourself in a
quandary. This new person in your life, are you going to keep them
away from your ex or that friend? Is it suddenly awkward for you to
be friends with that trusted person?
The best course of action, in my
opinion, is to make that introduction. Allow them to engage and
learn from that experience who these two are by how they relate to
each other.
Allow the two of them to decide if
they will get along. A real friend will respect your lover, and a
true love will respect that you have a good friend. If there's
conflict between them, ask them to work it out. Don't stand in the
middle or try to keep them apart. It will crush you and be miserable
for the two of them. The point is this, the two of them will let you
know if that friendship is going to be a real problem after the
introduction is made. If it's a problem before it's made, that's a
different situation, and you should either reconsider your friendship
or your new love, depending on who has the problem...
If you attend a church or synagogue,
it's highly likely you've made friends there. Now, I go to Cedar
Grove, and one of the things people do practice there are proper
introductions, so I've met quite a few people. I haven't really met
anyone I don't like at Church, though forming connections is never
guaranteed. Those that are uncomfortable with you simply won't form
that connection after being introduced, for whatever reason.
Note, please, that I would not
introduce someone I do not trust to someone that I trust without
making it clear to the person I trust if I make that introduction at
all. I would not, for instance, introduce anyone to Adam
Parris. I would (and have) pointed him out to people.
Human Connections is how communities
form. It's how we, as people, learn to be good to each other. It's
how we, as people, learn not to be selfish. In the long run, human
connections solve more problems than they cause and forms a bulwark
against those that would do harm.
All of it can start with a proper
introduction.
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