I was watching a football game when Phillip came into a restaurant near my house Saturday night. He spoke to me as he came in, but I was too absorbed in the game to pay much attention. But as this homeless man took a seat at the table next to me — as he typically does — I was struck even more than usual by the contrasts between us.
I just bought a new car Friday and I’m very happy with it. It’s not really a new car. It’s not some luxury model. It’s a Toyota Camry and it’s a couple of years old. But it’s much nicer than the 14-year-old Corolla I’ve been driving for the last six years or so. By comparison, it feels like luxury.
Suddenly, the new car made me painfully conscious of the differences between Phillip and me. It wasn’t that I regretted what I had. I didn’t feel guilty for having nice things. But I was suddenly grateful for the things I had.
I noticed the shoes that Phillip was wearing tonight. They were a pair that he had proudly shown me about six weeks ago. He had gone to visit a church where he sometimes gets help and the preacher had surprised him that day with these shoes.
I had arrived at the restaurant tonight in a nice new car. He had arrived in donated shoes.

Why is it ‘isolationism’ to oppose killing those who didn’t attack us?
Group conflict isn’t as simple as tales of good guys vs. bad guys
Confirmation bias means most of us assume our opponents are ‘morans’
Cop’s murder has me pondering why humans kill those they love
World is a surreal alien landscape where nothing makes sense to me
Fear of making trade-offs to get best life leaves us with nothing
Best years of our lives? For me, teen years were start of feeling like alien
Beauty is everywhere around us, when our eyes are open to see it
Against all rational choice of will, an old hunger in my heart returns