Fri 25 Apr 2008
On Being Homeless for 35 Minutes in Central London
Posted by Chris Guillebeau under Social Responsibility, Travel, Unusual ExperiencesIf you're new here, you may want to learn what this site is about. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed or sign up for free email updates. Thanks for visiting!
A couple of years ago, I was in London on a three-day layover after flying in from Africa. I had been in Sierra Leone for several months and was looking forward to walking the streets, hanging out in coffee shops, and seeing friends before heading on.
On my first night in the city, I had nothing important to do, so I took the underground down to Trafalgar Square. I bought a takeaway curry meal for dinner and ate about half of it on a park bench. Then I went walking down Oxford Street for about 15 blocks in search of the nearest Borders bookstore where I hoped to spend the rest of the evening reading books and drinking coffee. I kept the rest of my dinner box with me, because I thought I might run into a homeless person who would appreciate some food. After walking 10 blocks, I hadn’t met anyone and began to feel silly about carrying around half a box of vegetable curry, so I finally threw it away.
Sure enough, two blocks later, I came by a panhandler who was sitting beside an ATM (a convenient location, I thought) asking people for spare change as they walked by. I felt bad about throwing away the rest of my dinner, so I decided to see if I could do something else to help.
I asked his permission to sit down and chat. “John” welcomed me and told me his story. Years ago, he had been a successful tradesman but had fallen on hard times, went through a divorce, and so on. If you talk with homeless people in most major cities throughout the world, you’ll often hear similar stories. Sometimes they’re true and often they’re not, but I’ve learned that it doesn’t matter that much. For whatever reason, most people hanging out on the streets all day really don’t have a regular place to live.
How To Give $17 and Lose $17 More
I talked with John for ten minutes, and his story was growing crazier by the minute. The climax came when he told me that six months ago, he was at this same ATM station when a woman was being robbed. John tried to defend her, but was hurt in the process. The police came and arrested him because the mystery attacker had fled the scene.
At this point I interrupted him. “Look,” I said. “I’ll give you some money for dinner, but you don’t have to lie to me. Do you really expect me to believe you?”
John kept insisting that the story was true, and I may have even started to believe him. “What has he got to lose?” I thought. Perhaps I was feeling especially generous after coming out of Africa for the first time in months, but I gave him £10, which was about $17 at the time. John was very thankful.
I let my guard down a few minutes later when John’s face brightened and he said, “Hey, I get a lot of coins from people and they’re heavy to carry around all the time. Would you mind exchanging these coins for a ten-pound note?”
I looked at a paper cup in his hand, which was indeed filled with heavy English coins. I gave him the note. John put it in his pocket and stood up. “I’m just going to the washroom down the street,” he told me. “Can you watch my stuff for me?”
He took his backpack with him but left his coat, a box of crackers, and another bag with me. As he walked off I realized that he had taken the cup of coins with him too. I was alarmed for a moment, but then I remembered the stuff that he had left in my care.
“That’s a clever trick,” I thought. “I bet he’s thinking that I’ll forget to ask him for the coins when he comes back. He is coming back, right?” I looked at his things beside me and felt relieved again. What kind of guy would leave his stuff behind and never return?
Well, I waited for John for ten minutes. Then I waited another five minutes. The whole time, people kept walking by, trying not to make eye contact with me as I sat beside the ATM with a homeless guy’s stuff. I felt incredibly uncomfortable. One guy actually said, “Good evening” to me, and I rushed to explain myself.
“Oh, hi. I’m not really sitting here. I mean, I’m just waiting for my friend John. You know John? He, uh, works here sometimes.” The man walked on and I grew even more anxious. Around that time, I decided to go through John’s things to see what I was faithfully looking after.
Upon Realizing I Would Never See My $17 Again
To my surprise, I found that the bag he left behind was full of trash. The cracker box was empty. The coat, which I had earlier assumed would never be discarded, was old, tattered, and dirty. That morning I had browsed through a charity shop where I saw dozens of old coats for five pounds or less.
And I realized what I should have known from the beginning—John was gone, and he had taken almost $17 from me, in addition to the $17 that I willingly gave him, and he wasn’t planning on coming back.
I felt incredibly angry and embarrassed. Wasn’t I a Very Experienced Traveler? Don’t I know how to talk to homeless people in a place like London? How can I go traveling all over Africa, deflecting bribe requests from corrupt officials and staying out of trouble, only to end up losing $17 the first day I get back to Europe?
I was determined to not let John get the better of me. After all, I reasoned, he has to come back sometime. He’s probably going to wait half an hour and then return, thinking that I’ve given up. I’ll show him, I thought.
“Nice try, John,” I imagined myself saying. “You put on a good effort, but I want my ten pounds back right now.”
I sat there for another twenty minutes, looking at the ground and getting more and more angry. I didn’t want to admit the truth to myself—John wasn’t coming back. Whether I admitted it or not, though, it was true.
Anger and Resentment
I finally left the ATM in disgust. I couldn’t figure out who I was the most upset at—John or myself. There must be some good reason for this, I kept thinking. Maybe I’ll run into John at the Borders tonight and I can confront him then.
“Who bought you that hot chocolate? Who paid the extra thirty pence for the whipped cream on top?”
After walking around the London streets for another half-hour, I made it to the Borders I had set out to find a long time ago. John wasn’t at the café inside. I didn’t see him later that night as I rode the underground back to my guesthouse, and I didn’t see him two mornings later as I left London for another city.
Life requires you to take risks. When you take risks, sometimes you lose. Is it worth it to you?
Was it worth it to me that night?
Resolution
I thought about calling this essay, “How To Lose $34 in London,” but I realized that losing the $34 was easy. The hard part was learning to let go of the money long after it had left my pocket.
Whether by his own fault or through the fault of others, John was homeless. While I went around sleeping in hotel rooms or on the couches of friends, John went from shelter to shelter. Given the choice, would I trade places with John for even one day? The idea is laughable—I could hardly manage to sit on the sidewalk by the London ATM for 30 minutes, knowing that the people passing by thought I was homeless. Yet, some part of me that night was resentful of John and wished that I could be in his place with the $34.
***
I have a friend, Marie, who works with the homeless in Seattle. One night she came over to talk to us about her recommendations for how we should respond to the many transient people in our city. One thing that Marie said made a big impression on me.
“You can give money if you want,” she told us. “But once you give it, let it go. Don’t expect a miracle, because many people on the streets are not ready to change their situations. But at the same time, there’s nothing wrong with helping someone get dinner or a place to stay.”
I liked that approach. Do what you can do to help, and then let it go. Live your life, help others, and don’t stress out when something doesn’t work the way you expected it would. You can still go to Borders and read books at the café.
John, if you’re out there, I can’t really say “thanks” for taking my money. I’m still a little mad about it. But I appreciate the lessons I learned through my mistake and your chicanery. I’ve probably been thinking about this long after you’ve forgotten it, so it’s time for me to let it go too.
I hope you got another coat from the charity shop.
I hope you won’t be falsely arrested for fending off robbers at the ATM again.
I hope you enjoyed the hot chocolate that I imagined my money being spent on.
Take care, John, and everyone else out there in London and beyond.
###
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Susan
April 25th, 2008 at 6:37 am
Great Story. Helpful perspective: “Freely you’ve received, freely give.” I’ve been there before and no doubt will be again. Thanks for your transparent and memorable thoughts, Chris.
guinness416
April 25th, 2008 at 8:22 am
Wonderful post, Chris.
John
April 25th, 2008 at 9:00 am
This is such a well reasoned response to the situation. Moving to Chicago from Kentucky, I intitially felt the frustration of wanting to give money but not having enough to support myself and give to everyone who asked me. I had a similiar experience that made me “toughen up” a bit and to become more wise about what I can actually do and what is beyond the scope of a single individual. The idea of “letting go” of the money once it leaves your pocket is an important one to highlight, and really the heart of “charity.”
Andrew
May 9th, 2008 at 1:09 pm
I’m British and I can’t help but feel a bit ashamed that this happened to you in London. You were trying to help the guy and then he pulls a trick like that
I think you dealt with it in a very mature way though.
I hope this didn’t leave you with a bad impression of London.
p.s. I love your blog
Chris
May 9th, 2008 at 5:12 pm
@Andrew- Don’t feel bad; it could have happened anywhere. I think we sometimes respond to situations differently when it is an unfamiliar setting, because I don’t usually give away my money to homeless guys in the U.S.
I do not have a bad impression of London or the U.K. at all.
Rick
May 22nd, 2008 at 11:22 pm
Once, a panhandler offered to sing me a song for $5. Though a little uncomfortable, i gave it to him. In 2 seconds he transformed from panhandler to busker. So there I was, in the middle of the sidewalk, people passing (and looking horrified) as he screamed punk-ish lyrics about a foot from my face. Loved every second.
Chris
May 23rd, 2008 at 11:52 am
Thanks to all for the feedback - @Susan, @Guiness416, @John, and @Rick.
Rick, that is a great story! There are a couple singing panhandler guys in Seattle’s University District, but nothing quite like that.
C.J. Boehle
June 17th, 2008 at 1:34 pm
I’m still working on letting go of feelings of betrayal over episodes that elicit those feelings, so thanks for the great reminder. Also, I have worked for many years with street people and sometimes I find they have a curious (to me) philosophy of how things are.
Sometimes they think of such episodes as you have described as a game between you and them. Sometimes they believe they are doing you a favour by teaching you not to be so naive. They very seldom realize they have betrayed trust so they seldom have pangs of conscience. They mostly believe they are so insignificant or what they have taken from you is so insignificant that it won’t hurt you.
He probably would expect you to laugh at his cleverness and be full of admiration. Remember Aesop’s fable about the Fox and the scorpion? It was his nature to be the trickster. He wasn’t just exploiting your kindness but just wrapped up in his role of clever street con man. Does this make it easier in processing any residual feelings? I hope so.
Stephen Hopson
July 7th, 2008 at 4:19 am
Chris:
I found this to be a rather interesting story that took me back to the time when a woman, in the pouring rain, came up to my car when I was pulling out of a parking spot, crying about something. She asked for money. I reached for my wallet and saw I had some in there but I lied and said I didn’t have any. Then drove away.
I later wrote an article about it - i had felt badly for lying. All sorts of thoughts went through my mind one of which was something along the lines of “She’s faking it and trying to take advantage of me at an inopportune time.” The end of that article emphasized that what you give is between you and God. If you give, be prepared not to see it again. If you don’t give, you’ll have another opportunity to do so.
Very interesting. You have a nice writing style. You write well. I’m amazed you’re traveling all over the world, writing in the process and uploading it from where ever you happen to be.
Just me
July 12th, 2008 at 2:45 am
I was homeless for 18 months. Nope. No drugs, no alcohol, no spousal abuse - just grief after my father died. I moved into my van, alternated between depression and temp work, survived a winter, summer and fall in Colorado, then another winter in the south before finally getting it together. Email me and I’ll send you the link to some video of it. But along the way 98% of those I met treated me like a criminal. One gave me a laptop computer and a cell-phone and that was all it took to help me climb out of the hole I was in. Not many people are so generous, but to those who gave me money, bought me meals, let me shower or sleep in their homes - I’m grateful. Don’t beat yourself up for believing in the basic goodness of people. There are are just as many crooks in business suits and ties as in rags.
Patricia Singleton
July 23rd, 2008 at 9:08 am
Chris, I believe that people come into our lives for the lessons that they have for us. Why stay angry with the guy? It isn’t hurting him. I would look at why you are still angry after all of this time. Maybe that is where your lesson is?
Chris
July 23rd, 2008 at 9:12 am
@Just Me,
Thank you for the amazing story. That is truly incredible. Wow.
@Patricia,
I’m not angry with him at all. The essay was mostly about the process of working through my initial feelings of anger and disappointment (in myself) to the point of acceptance. It took longer than I would have liked — a day or two instead of right away — but I certainly didn’t stay upset longer than that.