I serve on the board of directors at Metro Dallas Homeless Alliance, the non-profit organization that operates our city's new  homeless assistance center, The Bridge. 
Last Thursday afternoon, I sat in a strategic planning committee session at The Bridge.  We met in one of the new classrooms.  One side of the room is almost all glass that provides a window onto the street just outside. 
During our conversation, a woman walked down the sidewalk as she made her way to the front gate of the facility.  She wore only a hospital patient gown with a matching outer robe, most likely just another bed gown creatively positioned to provide her at least a bit of modesty.
Identification and treatment wristbands still in place, she cradled a small box in her arms, no doubt containing some treasure she retrieved from her stay in the hospital. 
What I saw on  her person was likely all that she owned in the world.
I expect that she was dropped off at The Bridge by some health care provider who determined her stay was up.  The chosen "after care plan" for her was a ride to our facility where she was gladly welcomed in.
Her passing reset the purpose of our meeting for me, rendering our detailed discussion of by-laws almost irrelevant, certainly comical. 
At the same time, her life pressed on us a severe urgency that calls for the most extreme form of merciful compassion and community commitment. 
As I watched her limp toward our door, I wondered how her story reads.
As I pondered her situation,  it became very clear that the reasons and the details as to why she arrived in such a state just don't matter at all.
My sister has nothing but a hospital gown and a box of tissue. 
What more do I need to understand?
 
 
2 comments:
If I do nothing more than read these words you wrote today and the Bible for the rest of my life, I will be the much better as interact with people in my world.
Peace,
Greg
My sister has nothing but a hospital gown and a box of tissue.
What more do I need to understand?
That's just beautiful.
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