Police officer shares pizza with a homeless woman during lunch in a touching gesture
However, during the course of one week, he noticed a woman whose face he had never seen in the area before, and something about her compelled him to take a closer look. As Rivers drove past her, the woman, who was wearing a pair of jeans and a white t-shirt with a powerful statement written on it, made eye contact with Rivers and responded with a straightforward “hey” as he drove by.
Rivers, however, disclosed in an interview with CNN that he was preoccupied with the brief encounter even after it had passed. Something kept nagging at him to turn around and talk to the woman who was sporting a t-shirt with the words “Homeless. The fastest way of becoming a nobody” written on it. The 29-year-old finally decided that he’d go back to the spot he’d seen her during his lunch break.
“God put it on my heart to get her lunch,” said Rivers. “So I turned around and I asked her, ‘Hey, did you eat today?’ And she said, ‘No.'”
Rivers went to a nearby pizza shop and purchased pepperoni and cheese pizzas. He then sat down next to her on the grass and the two of them engaged in one of the most thought-provoking conversations he has ever had.
He said that the conversation that they had was even better than the pizza that they had shared. After exchanging life stories with the homeless woman, who he said identified herself as Michelle, during his lunch break, he came to the conclusion that he and she had something in common.
River found out that Michelle has a daughter who is 12 years old, is battling liver disease, and was in foster care. Michelle’s daughter was placed with River’s family.
After lunch together, Michelle and Rivers went their separate ways, and the police officer couldn’t help but reflect on the ways in which his new friend and he are perceived by society in the same way. People who are homeless are frequently stigmatized by society and told they are to blame for their precarious living conditions.
Rivers came to the conclusion that society as a whole has a somewhat negative view of law enforcement officers because it concentrates on the “bad apples” in the profession rather than looking at law enforcement officers as a whole.
But, as Rivers pointed out,”homeless people are just people who are down on their luck,” Rivers said. “It can happen to anybody.” As for himself, he revealed that he didn’t set out to be a police officer because he wanted to ruin a person’s day.
“I come to work and my method is, ‘Who can I bless today? Who can I make smile?'” Rivers said. “I’m not the one that wants to take somebody’s father or mother away and put them in jail.”