Leave What You Can

The worst of covid is over in most parts of the country, but the increase in homelessness and hunger has not gone away. If we feel responsibility for our neighbors, we can provide and stock blessing boxes.
Blessing boxes are two-way streets. Those in need receive food and other items from a box while those who walk by are reminded to re-stock them.
If you want to establish a blessing box, there is a lot of information available on construction and maintenance. Most sources agree there are two steps.
First, these boxes must be constructed and installed. Houses of worship and other non-profits can put them at locations in their neighborhoods. Town governments can approve these pantries on public land. A bit of privacy prevents embarrassing exposure; a blessing box at a major downtown intersection will not do. Obscurity is not a problem once the word is passed in the community.
The internet has plans for building a blessing box; designing your own is not necessary. Many plans are based on a standard 4x8 sheet of exterior plywood. Some retailers will sell wood and paint to a non-profit at a discount.
Second, the box must be filled and refilled. In the long run, keeping a blessing box stocked may be more of a challenge than installing one.
Commitment is needed. It’s unhappy to imagine a blessing box well-supplied for a few months and then remaining empty. For obvious reasons, organizations are better sponsors than individuals. Churches and Boy Scout troops that sponsor a pantry can arrange schedules for members to monitor and supply food. Children can ask for food donations instead of birthday presents. There are obvious limits; food in long shelf-life containers is ideal, ice cream is not.
Some blessing boxes provide essential non-food items, such as hygiene products, toilet paper, gloves, and socks. Once your blessing box has been installed, the knowledge of the important needs it satisfies may bring its blessing to you.
For inspiration, check out this article about Blessing Boxes on the Mid-Shore.
Click here for more pictures and video instructions. Click here for more information. For construction instruction, click here.
Jim Block taught English at Northfield Mount Hermon, a boarding school in Western Mass. He coached cross-country and advised the newspaper and the debate society there. He taught at Marlborough College in England and Robert College in Istanbul. He and his wife retired to Chestertown, Md., in 2014.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore




