It’s not that unusual to see bicycles along U.S. 11 in the suburb where I live, but something caught my eye about this one. It was around noon Monday. Lunch traffic was heavy, so I passed him slowly enough to get a good look.
It was an old man on a beat-up bicycle. On the back, there was a hand-lettered sign that said, “Hungry — please help.”
I’ve seen desperate people and panhandlers many times, but something about him — or maybe just the mood I was in — made me wonder about him. How did he come to be an old man who’s desperate enough to ride around and beg?
It’s easy to look at such people and assume they’ve made bad choices. I mean, we’re not in their position, so we’ve obviously made the right choices and they haven’t. Right? Was it alcohol? Was he lazy? Did he have something unexpected happen to him? What was his story?
I didn’t know the answers to any of those questions, but I felt a tremendous sense of empathy for him. I wondered how life could have taken the turns that led to where he is today.
So I decided to find out.

Federal checks are destroying incentive to take entry-level jobs
Sane people change systems with ideas, not by murdering people
Black? White? Brown? Santa Claus is any color you want to make him
We’re all a little crazy; I worry about those who don’t know it
New Year’s resolutions don’t change anything until we change ourselves
11 children left orphaned by plane crash remind me how fickle life is
Delusional Democrats help Trump re-election by chasing phantoms