I Always Gave a Few Dollars to a Homeless Man on My Way to Work

Work at the library. Go home to an empty house. Heat up leftovers I didn’t really taste. Sleep. Repeat.

That was the plan.

Three months ago, I buried my husband. Cancer took Evan slowly, cruelly—chemo, scans, bad coffee in hospital waiting rooms, and doctors using the word stable like it meant safety. Then one morning, he just didn’t wake up.

After the funeral, our house felt like a stage set frozen mid-scene. His jacket still draped over the chair. His shoes by the door. His toothbrush next to mine, like he was only late coming home. Grief was everywhere, but the mortgage didn’t care. So I took a job as an assistant librarian.

It was quiet work. Shelving books. Fixing printer jams. Crying silently between the stacks.That’s where I first noticed the old man.

He sat on the bench outside the library gate every morning. Gray hair tucked under a knit cap. A brown coat worn thin at the elbows. Gloves with the fingers cut off. Always the same folded newspaper in his hands.

The first week, I walked past him.

The second week, I dropped a dollar into his Styrofoam cup. He looked up, eyes sharper than I expected, and said, “Take care of yourself, dear.”

The next day, I brought him a sandwich and a cheap coffee.

“Turkey,” I told him. “Nothing fancy.”He accepted them with both hands. “Thank you,” he said. “Take care of yourself, dear.”

It became our quiet ritual. I got off the bus, gave him whatever I could spare. No questions. No pity. Just that same line every time.Weirdly, it helped more than all the you’re so strong speeches.

VA

Related Posts

How to Stop Freezer Frost Before It Becomes a Problem

Opening a freezer only to find thick frost creeping across the walls is a common household annoyance. What begins as a light dusting of ice can slowly…

Check Your Change — A Lincoln Penny Worth $336,000 Might Be Sitting There

The 1943 Bronze Lincoln Cent remains one of the most fascinating error coins in American history, a product of chance during the chaos of World War II….

I Gave My Last $3 to a Stranger at a Gas Station and Woke up Owning a Business Empire

I had almost nothing left when that night arrived: three wrinkled dollar bills in my pocket and three children asleep in the back of a battered van….

I Raised My Best Friend’s Son – 12 Years Later, My Wife Told Me, ‘Your Son Is Hiding a Big Secret from You’

My name is Oliver. I’m 38 years old, and I didn’t grow up with anything that resembled a real family. I was raised in a children’s home—gray…

Senate Votes 88-2 to Bolster Key Energy Sector

In a sweeping and near-unanimous vote, the U.S. Senate has approved a landmark legislative package that could reshape America’s energy future. Passing 88–2, the bipartisan measure aims…

I GOT PREGNANT IN GRADE 10 AND MY PARENTS DISOWNED ME I LEFT WITH NOTHING BUILT A LIFE FROM SHAME AND SILENCE AND RETURNED DECADES LATER ONLY TO DISCOVER A CHILD AT THEIR DOOR WHO SHARED MY FACE AND A TRUTH THAT BROKE EVERY WOUND I CARRIED FOR YEARS

The moment I realized I was pregnant, my world collapsed inward so violently that I could barely breathe. I was still a schoolgirl, living in a body…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *