I met a friend for lunch over near Union Station and then decided to walk back home. It’s about 30 blocks so I knew I would find somebody! I stopped by So Others Might Eat (SOME) and picked up some information and then kept on snaking my way over to Dupont Circle. I came across a nice guy who was originally from Mexico out walking a couple of dogs. He took my card but said he preferred that I find someone else…so on I went.
I decided to stop by Tent City DC. When I arrived at the abandoned lot at 7th and R Streets I didn’t find anyone there. I walked around, yelled “hello, anybody home” but no voices came from any of the tents. Just then two young girls yelled over to me from outside the fenced in area where I was standing. “Hey, why are you guys staying in these tents?” I walked over and explained to them that I was not one of the people staying in the tents, but that they were protesting the fact that Parcel 42 was being earmarked for development into luxury condos instead of affordable housing like what was promised by the mayor’s office a few years ago.
I told them about my project and asked if I could give them my $10 for the day.
Cierra is 17 and Shaquan is almost 16. They are high school students who are working this summer at a youth camp. They are also two of the 463,000 children living in foster care in the US.
Shaquan has been in the system since she was three and has been in and out of group homes and families all of her life. “The system has got a lot of problems,” Shaquan says. “Every time you go to a new place you got to go through the whole screening process again.” Cierra has only been in foster care for about five years but even in that relatively short amount of time she has been shuffled between 6-8 families. Right now they are both living with Cierra’s sister for the summer, but soon they will go back to a foster family or group house.
They say that some foster families are only in it for the money. “They get a lot of money from the government and we don’t see any of it,” according to Shaquan. I played devil’s advocate a little and reminded them that the families also have a lot of costs that they may not see directly. The agreed that that was probably true, but they still felt like there were some inequities there.
I was deeply sadden as I talked to these smart, articulate young women. They have been forced to grow up much faster than others. They have felt unloved and unwanted at times and suffered through the pain that accompanies those emotions. “It’s hard,” Shaquan starts to say, “I used to blame other people for my actions, but I can’t blame nobody but myself. You got to keep your head up!” She went on to say that she was adopted by a family years ago and she “messed it all up.” She was referring to a woman named Ms. Theresa. I learned that in addition to adopting Shaquan, Ms. Theresa had also opened her home to Cierra. “Man, I wish I was back there now. I didn’t know how good I had it, but I messed up again,” Shaquan says.
I asked them what they were going to do with the $5 that each of them had in their hand. “Probably give it to someone else,” they said. “If I see a homeless person and I got money in my pocket, I give something,” Shaquan says.
This was one of those days that I couldn’t stop thinking about the people who I had met for a long time after the goodbyes. Both of these girls have so much to offer the world. They are smart. They are charismatic. They are strong yet sensitive and thoughtful at the same time. They are beautiful young women who have not had the easiest path to get to where they are today and admitted to having made some poor choices themselves. What impressed me most was their attitude. They could have said “poor me, why me?” But they didn’t. They accepted responsibility for their actions and their lives and were living in the present making the best out of the cards that they have been dealt. Keep your head up!












Today’s recipients are third year medical students at George Washington University Medical School. It seems that I have had a lot of recipients in the medical field over the last couple weeks. 


Sometimes I get almost to the end of the day and still haven’t given away my $10. The biggest challenge when this happens is that being dark outside creates another element to the task. At least here in the city, people’s defense mechanisms are heightened at night. We are much more leery of someone who approaches us at night, so sometimes I end up going to business establishments that are lit up where people have a greater sense of security, albeit perhaps a false one. 























Originally from Mumbai (Bombay), India, Raoul moved to the US about 15 years ago. His parents are diplomats and they were posted here in DC. He grew up speaking Hindi and five other local dialects in addition to English. I asked him how somebody learns five dialects! “You just sort of pick them up informally by talking with your friends” he shared. Now he also speaks some Spanish, French and Italian. It probably won’t come as any surprise to you that Raoul is well traveled and has visited 37 countries.












Other day I checked my wallet and I had seven dollars in it so I went to the ATM and retrieved $100. I then walked inside the bank and asked if I could get the twenty-dollar bills broken down into ten-dollar bills. I shared with Catherine the idea of the Year of Giving and she got so excited. “Ooh, I’d like somebody to give me $10!”









So I went out to Safeway last night and bought a copy (actually two) of the bright pink Woman’s World Magazine. It was the only thing I bought and I got a couple strange looks from the cashier. Anyway, on the back inside cover there is really good article on the Year of Giving and a picture of me in a shirt that looks really 
So at some point Valerie asked if I wanted something to drink. “We’re having watermelon juice and vodka.” That seemed like a strange combination. “We have moved literally everything out of our place. The only thing we have left in there is half a bottle of wine, watermelon juice and a handle of vodka.” A handle? Hadn’t ever heard it called that. Anyway, let’s try this watermelon and vodka, I hope they still have ice! You know what, the drink wasn’t bad either.
off the porch – he lives upstairs from them. “We didn’t think he would miss one day’s paper.” Well, he did. He came down and asked them if they had “borrowed” it. Caught off guard they denied it. As we were talking about this, he and his wife arrived home. He seemed like such a nice man. I think they felt a little bad about it. Maybe they will use the $10 to buy a back issue copy of that day’s paper and send it to him!







