We toured the Louisville Slugger Factory and visited Churchill Downs. The weather was gorgeous and I thoroughly enjoyed seeing some American classics.
The first was this partially eaten apple.
When we walked by it I thought, "I could pick that up and eat it!" And this thought completely surprised me. Would I have thought twice about an apple on the sidewalk before today?
Someone didn't eat their fresh, warm, delicious bread. Do you know how much I miss bread? Yes, I could've eaten it off the ground...and been perfectly fine with it.
In fact, my friend and I considered the possibility of adding this little rule to my challenge. If I find food left by someone else (legitimately left by someone I don't know and not planted for my benefit), I can eat it if I want to. What do you think? Fair enough? I'll need some feedback before I will change my rules but this seems reasonable...not to mention humbling.
As we passed a tree planted in a cut-out of the sidewalk that was covered with a grate, it reminded me of story from my childhood. The story began with my confession that I never appreciated all of the things my parents provided for us, including the trips they took us girls on.
At that point, I nearly stepped on this...
I was probably 12 or 13. We were walking down the sidewalk in Philadelphia and I noticed a man poking a stick into such a grate. My curiosity got the best of me and I went over to see what he was poking at. Was it a small animal? What was so interesting to him?
As I stood beside the man looking down into the grate, I realized that he had placed a piece of gum on the end of the stick. He was using this tool to try and pick up a dime that had fallen in the grate.
My mind was blown. For the first time in my life, I had to face the desperation in which many people must live.
Ironic that I found a dime in the midst of telling this story? No...not at all.
God made me mindful of many things on the streets of Louisville.