He reached into the back pocket of his work pants and pulled out an old, worn leather wallet. It was incredibly thin. He opened it and pulled out a ten-dollar bill.
Then a five. Then, with painstaking care, he began to pull out wrinkled, crumpled single dollar bills, smoothing them flat on the black conveyor belt with his grease-stained thumbs.
Ten, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen… twenty-six dollars and fifty cents.
The young man didn’t get angry. He didn’t curse at the rising cost of living, and he didn’t beg the cashier for a break. He just stared down at the sad, crumpled bills scattered on the counter.
“Can you… can you just put the diapers back behind the counter?” he asked, swallowing hard, his voice thick with shame. “I’ll come back for them tomorrow when I get my paycheck.”
I have seen children who didn’t have lunch money, and young parents who simply couldn’t afford to buy their kids a winter coat. But the look in this young man’s eyes—a fierce, protective fatherly pride crumbling into absolute, public defeat—shattered my heart into a million pieces.
But I know what it looks like when a good, hardworking American is trying desperately to hold onto his dignity in front of a line of strangers.
“You dropped this in the parking lot. I tried to catch up to you by the automatic doors, but my knees simply aren’t what they used to be.”
We both knew the truth. We both knew he hadn’t dropped a single dime in that wet parking lot. He knew it, and he knew that I knew it.
They brimmed at the edges, catching the harsh fluorescent store light, but he was far too strong to let them fall. His calloused, shaking hand reached out and took the bill from my fingers.
I really must have been distracted today.”
His shoulders were pulled back. He walked with his head held high, his dignity fully intact.
But community means we do not have to face it alone.

