I am sitting in the pay-as-you-feel Lentil as Anything restaurant in the Abbortsford Convent in
Melbourne. This means that you eat delicious food and then literally pay what
you feel the meal is worth or what you have in your pocket at the time. It’s a
Saturday afternoon and I have brought myself here to be in the buzz, drink some
chai, eat some food and write some blog. It’s a beautiful chilly Melbourne day
but we’re all snug and warm in here. The chatter of well-fed people fill my
ears, along with the clinking of cutlery and crockery while the business of
being a restaurant takes place around us. Musicians take turns at enchanting us
with their piano expertise and closing my eyes I could be at any bustling,
‘normal’ restaurant.
People are lining up along the metal bayonets overflowing
with abundant vegetarian food, each person dishing up for themselves.
Restaurant volunteers are as busy as anyone in the restaurant industry, and yet
they’re not being paid for this – they’re giving up their Saturday afternoon to
serve us. I asked one of the waitresses why she volunteers here. She’s a
traveller and her only form of income, besides the food she eats here, is
busking on Melbourne’s streets. She says she works here nearly every day and
enjoys being part of a community with the values which this restaurant celebrates.
Once you have had your fill of delicious food and perhaps
ordered a delicious hot drink, you go to the wooden treasure chest up against
the wall and slip in however much money you feel you can pay. I love this concept;
I love the giving-ness of it. Some would be sceptical of this kind of model
working in the long term, but this place is packed every single day, there are
four branches in Melbourne and a brand new one recently opened up in Sydney - the next on my list to visit!
Lentil as Anything
runs on a model of trust, generosity, kindness and inclusion…without drawing
attention to someone’s ability to pay. Lentil started so that people with no
money can learn, work, eat, socialise and have fun in our restaurant without
compromising their integrity or dignity…At Lentil, we believe in the power of
humanity to create stupendous change and that everyone deserves a place at the
table. Our food is not free, but you are… Lentils
as Anything - Menu
Imagine if there was more space for these kinds of spaces in
the world? Imagine if everyone could come and find a place to be safe and cosy and call home, even if just for a little while.
Postscript: After finishing the first draft of this blog
post, a guy came and sat opposite me. I felt a strange vibe from him and asked the girls
sitting next to me if they would watch my computer while I went to the
bathroom. I came back and this guy started to engage me in conversation. It was
difficult to understand him, his accent was thick and I also felt as one feels
when they’re with someone who is not quite…normal. He started speaking about
aliens and anti-viruses and how he doesn't use a home phone. I cut him off,
“I'm just busy working here…” I smiled at him in that sickly sweet way you do when you're trying to be nice but not nice at the same time - a part of me
thought I should listen to him, who knows what he might have to say. The other
obstinate part of me wanted to write my blog in peace, about the inclusion of
everyone at this restaurant. He was unimpressed by my desire to ‘work’ and told
me so, and I got the feeling that he was telling me that here he was trying to
give me something by way of his conversation and I was rebuffing him. Soon he
left, I smiled up at him, trying to redeem myself and he smiled sadly before he
turned to walk away. I was filled with guilt. Here I was celebrating how this
restaurant is so inclusive, and yet not even for ten minutes could I include
this man in my life. Another lesson to learn perhaps, hopefully I’ll remember
it the next time I am faced with a chatty stranger whom I feel has nothing to
say.
Everyone comes into your life for a reason.You reflected and next time you will make time. As a former, short term volunteer, at Lentil St Kilda, our customers made the place what it is. And sometimes you need to engage. A chef in Leeds UK was a former customer and he was so inspired he opened a Pay as You Feel place in Leeds - so if you get to the UK go visit and speak to the stranger. Connect. Abbotsford is where we spent Christmas Eve, 2011
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading and your response :) I will definitely find my way to the restaurant in Leeds someday :)
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