Don’t give to the beggars they said,
So I didn’t and my heart ached
AS I turned and walked away
From a 4 year old starving child.
Don’t give to the beggars they said.
So I hid my money and walked away
From a thing Mother and her two children.
Don’t give to the beggars they said.
So I pushed away the little children.
Don’t give to the beggars they said.
So I laughed nervously as a leper
Clutched at my friend.
Laughed, because it was easier
Than to cry.
Don’t give to the beggars they said.
So I walked for blocks
Trying to ignore the kids at my side,
Running away, instead of staying to help.
Don’t give to the beggars they said.
I thought I hadn’t, but I was wrong…
I did give, each and every time…
A part of me, naïve to the pains of others.
I gave them my innocence,
And they gave me their pain.
And after
I will never been the same.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
So something I never mentioned about
By my last night in
The tables then turned as I wished him good night and told him to go home – it was way too late for a kid his age to be out and he should get some sleep. I suddenly realized that I was left with no money and would be on my own to somehow find a ride home. So with no real hope I went up to a taxi driver and explained my situation to him: I had foolishly used all but 20 rands (~$2.50) buying a child some food and now needed to get back to the port, an 80 rand ride. This is when we cue that insurance company commercial where one woman sees another doing something nice so than does something nice for a man on the street etc etc. follow it down the line – because the cab driver simply agreed. He’d drive me back to the port – and for free.
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