The year was 1975 and I worked as a manager for a nationally known
shoe corporation. The State was Alabama and I managed a lease unit in a
large department store.
My shoe department happened to be in
the back of the store, and I usually found myself either waiting on
customers or putting out stock. One day a middle-aged man, and his
almost grown son walked up as I was walking towards the front of the
store. And the father asked where he could find a bathroom. I motioned towards the back wall, and said something innocuous, and went about my business.
If I had conjured up a thousand possibilities, I would have never
dreamed up what happened next. I finished my chore, whatever it was, and
headed back to my shoe department. I remembered something I had to do
in the stockroom, and entered through an open doorway.
Suddenly before me, in all his glory, was that same retarded young
man…urinating on the floor of my stock room. Well, it didn’t take me
long to scream at him… “Stop, what are you doing? This isn’t the
bathroom!”
Apparently, the boy’s father had directed his son
towards the back of the store, and the young fella headed towards a door
he thought was the bathroom.
I scared the young lad badly.
Of that I’m quite sure. He lost no time “zipping up,” and getting out of
there. And I was left to clean up the yellow, liquid mess.
I’ve thought of that incident many times since then. I’m afraid I wasn’t
very charitable to the boy. And I’m a little ashamed of my words, and
actions that day.
That young man is bound to be pushing
sixty now, and I think of him sometimes. If I could speak to him again,
I’d apologize for my sharp admonition. He was just “doing what comes
naturally,” and, considering his mental challenges, he had made an
honest mistake.
In an age in which a controversy exists
about where one should properly "do their business" this particular
story adds an historic personal twist to the matter. At least this young
fella didn't know any better.
There are those among us who
don’t function, who don’t operate as we do. It pays to be charitable. We
have so much of which to be thankful.
By William McDonald, PhD. Excerpt from "(Mc)Donald's Daily Diary" Vol. 20. Copyright pending
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