Sometimes charity doesn`t begin at home. When I worked at a hostel for homeless men they often arrived with just the clothes they stood up in or with very little other clothing which was frequently only fit for the bin. We couldn`t house every man who arrived at the door especially if they had a dog which so many of them did.
We`d feed them, offer them a shower or a bath but we regularly couldn`t supply them with suitable fresh clothing. People used to bring us great Uncle Bert`s ancient suit or their Grandad`s shoes etc but what we really needed were warm coats, trainers, jeans, hoodies, track suit pants, and so on because most of the guys were in their late teens, 20`s or 30`s plus we needed clothes which could be layered in cold weather.
One particularly cold day a guy arrived with his Staffie terrier. He knew we couldn`t house him with the dog but was happy to have a hot meal. His hands were blue, he had a thin tracksuit jacket, trainers with the soles hanging off and a backpack containing his sleeping bag and little else. We`d nothing in our stores suitable for him so I rang a local charity shop and explained I had a guy who badly needed some warm clothing but who had no money so would they provide him with suitable items for free ? The answer was a firm resounding NO even though those items would have been donated for free.
I tried a couple of other charity shops and the answer was the same, they either wouldn`t give the guy clothing or they couldn`t because they didn`t want word to spread and other homeless arriving demanding free clothes or shoes. This was the case on several occasions during my time there and if anybody lives near a homeless hostel then I`m sure they`d be grateful for practical clothing to hand out. No used wedding dresses, funeral suits, brogue shoes, shirts and ties or panama hats etc but warm sweatshirts, jeans, tracksuit tops and bottoms, warm coats, gloves, scarves, knitted hats, blankets, sleeping bags, rucksacks, and so on, suitable for both men or women.