Thank you for sharing this poem and painting, Deborah. For nearly a year, during lockdown (May 2020–April 2021), my wife and I volunteered at a local homeless shelter in downtown Portland. We went four days a week and worked either lunch or dinner shifts. The shelter itself is also a group home for men who are trying to get a fresh start in life. To live there, they have to be clean, and they have to help out in multiple ways. We got to know many of them, as well as several regulars who came for their meals. Some were desperately, and tragically, in need of a lot of help; others were just trying to survive; some escaped horrible abuse; many had terrible addictions; and some had sadly recently been evicted due to losing their job during the pandemic or bankrupt because of a serious health issue. What they all shared, however, was serious trauma. It was so sad, but every single person, even those with the most severe mental health issues, just wanted to be seen, heard, respected, and treated as a human being. After all, everybody on the streets of every city or town, regardless of mental health or addictions, is somebody's child or family member.
I feel I learned so much in that year and had deeper conversations with people in both the shelter and on the street than I have with many "friends."
The one thing I worry about is some of the dehumanizing language I hear about the homeless community that comes from both the right and left wings. We have seen dehumanization play out before with horrifying consequences. I also fear we are becoming so selfishly entrapped in our own tunnel-vision lives that we no longer have compassion and have become desensitized to those who need help. With fentanyl, it has only been exacerbated to the point where I sometimes don't even know if the person on the street is alive. That said, I also fear that we too easily enable with our political correctness rather than put systems in place to truly help others. Some people on the streets of Portland (and other cities; Portland is just where I live) are in such desperate need of help that politicians on both sides are ignoring or wanting to sweep under the carpet, and it simply isn't humane.
It's shocking that in the wealthiest nation to have ever existed in the history of the world, we don't take care of our fellow humans.
Thank you for writing this, Michael. You speak so compassionately and knowingly about a problem that has grown so large it almost seems insurmountable. And yet it should be so simple to solve: Build affordable housing, tiny homes, group homes, turn motels into housing, allow people to live in their RVs or cars, or even provide space for tent cities until enough homes can be built. And of course provide healthcare services for those who face mental mental and addiction challenges. We could even make drugs free and legal until enough services have built the capacity to meet all those needs. Then people with $100 per day heroin habits wouldn't have to steal to survive, but could put their energy toward finding productive paid work. Instead, the governor of California has now mandated that municipalities cannot allow the homeless to live in camps but must move them out when there is no other place to go. So what do they do? It's making a a dire situation 100% worse. It shows such contempt for human life, for people who are already suffering and struggling to survive. As you say, it is shocking that the wealthiest nation in the world cannot provide for its most vulnerable citizens.
Thank you for sharing this poem and painting, Deborah. For nearly a year, during lockdown (May 2020–April 2021), my wife and I volunteered at a local homeless shelter in downtown Portland. We went four days a week and worked either lunch or dinner shifts. The shelter itself is also a group home for men who are trying to get a fresh start in life. To live there, they have to be clean, and they have to help out in multiple ways. We got to know many of them, as well as several regulars who came for their meals. Some were desperately, and tragically, in need of a lot of help; others were just trying to survive; some escaped horrible abuse; many had terrible addictions; and some had sadly recently been evicted due to losing their job during the pandemic or bankrupt because of a serious health issue. What they all shared, however, was serious trauma. It was so sad, but every single person, even those with the most severe mental health issues, just wanted to be seen, heard, respected, and treated as a human being. After all, everybody on the streets of every city or town, regardless of mental health or addictions, is somebody's child or family member.
I feel I learned so much in that year and had deeper conversations with people in both the shelter and on the street than I have with many "friends."
The one thing I worry about is some of the dehumanizing language I hear about the homeless community that comes from both the right and left wings. We have seen dehumanization play out before with horrifying consequences. I also fear we are becoming so selfishly entrapped in our own tunnel-vision lives that we no longer have compassion and have become desensitized to those who need help. With fentanyl, it has only been exacerbated to the point where I sometimes don't even know if the person on the street is alive. That said, I also fear that we too easily enable with our political correctness rather than put systems in place to truly help others. Some people on the streets of Portland (and other cities; Portland is just where I live) are in such desperate need of help that politicians on both sides are ignoring or wanting to sweep under the carpet, and it simply isn't humane.
It's shocking that in the wealthiest nation to have ever existed in the history of the world, we don't take care of our fellow humans.
Thank you for writing this, Michael. You speak so compassionately and knowingly about a problem that has grown so large it almost seems insurmountable. And yet it should be so simple to solve: Build affordable housing, tiny homes, group homes, turn motels into housing, allow people to live in their RVs or cars, or even provide space for tent cities until enough homes can be built. And of course provide healthcare services for those who face mental mental and addiction challenges. We could even make drugs free and legal until enough services have built the capacity to meet all those needs. Then people with $100 per day heroin habits wouldn't have to steal to survive, but could put their energy toward finding productive paid work. Instead, the governor of California has now mandated that municipalities cannot allow the homeless to live in camps but must move them out when there is no other place to go. So what do they do? It's making a a dire situation 100% worse. It shows such contempt for human life, for people who are already suffering and struggling to survive. As you say, it is shocking that the wealthiest nation in the world cannot provide for its most vulnerable citizens.