December was full of the joy of the holidays and
simultaneous heartbreak. This month was really busy between accepting constant
donations, meeting everyday needs, filling in for volunteers who had holiday
plans, and staying open seven days a week for three weeks straight. It was an
exhausting and fulfilling month. As the days grew shorter, I saw light
elsewhere throughout the holidays.
After
deciding at the November board meeting that new men’s showers were definitely
needed in the day shelter (there are at least ten showers per day in the two
showers per bathroom), the process started in early December. It only took a
little over a day to complete one shower, and during this process I received a
call in the office from a woman who wanted to donate for specific projects,
preferably larger projects, as she wanted to donate about five thousand
dollars. I instantly thought of the showers and how they were much needed, but
would put the day shelter a little over budget for the year. This was unlike
anything I had encountered- a need met almost instantly. She was willing to
work with us on these showers and was even willing to put in two new women’s
showers after seeing the quotes from the contractors. As I was still in shock
from all of this, I told the founder of this good news. He wasn’t surprised at
all. There’s an incredible way things fall out of the sky for both staff and
guests at the day shelter- if we are incredibly low on food, it magically
arrives before a meal. If we are low on mugs, they arrive as the last one is
being taken for coffee. Witnessing this sort of support and timeliness is
something you can’t really believe until you see it. I thought staff was being
overly casual when I started this year, saying things like “our needs have a
way of being met around here.” Turns out, it’s true for the most part. Things
seem to work out and when they do, I’m still in awe.
As the
winter rolled around in Boise, the colder weather meant more worry, more
donations, more illness, and more work. In early December staff made the
decision to stay open until 5pm, an extra half hour, as needed to keep people
inside for as long as we could. The gratitude of the guests confirmed that this
was the right decision. Even as the temperatures dropped and the snow settled
in the foothills, people still slept in their cars, on the streets, and, as I
learned from talking with some guests, in empty laundry rooms and vacant areas
of certain buildings. There is one guest who slept outside in the cold
temperatures of later December and came in after a hospital visit with
confirmed frostbite on five of his fingers. He would lose at least four of
those fingers, if not all five, in surgery in a couple of months. First he
would have to go back for more diagnostic tests. As he was telling me this I
didn’t ask why he had slept outside, as there are many reasons why people can’t
or won’t enter into overnight shelters, but I instead thought about how one
night could instantly take away half of his fingers. I was very aware for the
rest of the day exactly how much I used my fingers and how different life would
be without the use of them. This man came back the next day, very embarrassed,
and asked if I could tie his shoes. With the nerve damage from the frostbite he
couldn’t use his fingers to tie his shoes. I joked with him that I am always
amazed at everything I do in my position on a daily basis- things like tying
shoes, which I never would have thought of as part of the job. The truth was, I
was extremely humbled sitting there, seeing the exhaustion and anguish on his
face, and doing the simplest of tasks for him. He asked to borrow a marker to
write a sign and I asked if he needed help writing it, as I had the time to do
so. He nodded and I asked what he would like me to write. He said, “Broke with
frostbite. Please help.” I wrote it out, thinking just how accurate it was and
wondering if anyone would stop to help him out.
Flying
signs is a way of life for some guests, while others don’t participate at all.
Either way, everyone has their opinion about it. There is a sense of discomfort
about seeing someone flying a sign- the guests are very aware when people feel
uncomfortable by the sight of them. It’s a weird mixture of helplessness,
guilt, and sorrow seeing someone asking for a strangers help. I’ve thought a
lot about the whole concept of flying signs and wondering how to encounter
people who are. Of course, now, I know most of the people flying signs around
town personally, so I usually just say hello and converse with them. One guest
had a conversation with me one day about how humiliating it was to fly a sign.
He said he felt such shame, knowing how uncomfortable people were by the sight
of him. He said a lot of people turn away and wouldn’t even look at him or his
sign. He said these interactions, if you could call them that, make him feel
insignificant. He asked how he could feel any worth when others don’t even
acknowledge him. Thinking about it on a larger scale, though, I know some
people want restrictions on the money they give. They think, “Don’t use this
for drugs, alcohol, or any momentary pleasures. Save it, use it towards housing
and food. Maybe some shoes.” But the fact is that it’s difficult to put
restrictions on cash. Giving a gift means not controlling how the gift is used,
and that requires a certain amount of trust- trust in the ability for others,
even strangers, to make their own decisions about what they need most to get
by. I recently watched a documentary about homelessness and the woman filming
asked a man flying a sign what he used his money for, implying the money he got
from flying a sign. He asked her, in turn, what she used her money for. I liked
this point a lot. People often feel they have a right to know what their money
is being used for or what the poor are putting their money towards, where in
reality finances are usually very private matters. If someone asked me about
the details of my bank account, I would be taken aback. So little of people’s
lives are private when they are homeless. Some are forced to have payees making
financial decisions for them, forced to be passed by on the streets and stared
at, share a room with thirty to fifty other people in a shelter, never having
full quiet to sleep, being elbow to elbow in the day shelter where there never
seems to be enough seating, especially in the mornings. People can get very
irritated over lack of personal space, which is completely understandable. What
is frustrating is that this usually leads to yelling and violence, aggression
that comes from feeling smothered by others who most likely feel the same way.
We held
a card-writing session for guests in mid-December. This was an opportunity to
use donated Christmas cards to write to family, friends, and anyone else guests
wanted to connect with over the holiday season. Inevitably, staff, especially
the founder, received cards from guests. He was talking with me about it one
day, saying he wished people wouldn’t waste the cards by writing to him at
Christmas, someone they see at least a few times a week. I saw his point, but I
also mentioned that means they probably don’t have anyone else to write to. He
saw my point and we hung the cards up in the office and around the facility.
There
were a lot of guests who are very sick in these winter months. Because some
hold off on seeing a doctor or going to the hospital when they are sick, their
cold or flu can quickly turn into pneumonia, bronchitis, or something more
serious. There was a man found on a street corner earlier in the month
unconscious. Another guest called paramedics and he has been in the hospital
ever since, recovering from pneumonia, frostbite, and a few other
complications. His fiancé, another guest, has kept us updated about his
recovery, and we are hoping for the best even though things weren’t looking good.
There’s another, older man who I visited in the hospital who has lung cancer.
He was on oxygen constantly and when he ran out, which happened once, we had to
call paramedics to come with emergency oxygen for him. He’s doing well in the hospital,
putting on weight despite going through chemo, and basking in the fact that he
has a quiet room all to himself where he can watch movies he loves all day
long. Seeing how happy he was to be in the hospital made me sad, as that’s a
place not a lot of people want to be, but he thinks of it as a really great
environment to be in, despite the pain from his illness. His memory is starting
to go more now and he will eventually be put in long term care until he passes
away. There have been some guests who visit him and care for him, but the
hospital is out of the way and it’s difficult to get there on the bus. There
are so many barriers and not a lot we can do, so I try to be there, especially
around Christmas.
For
those who do pass without a home, there is a national event called The Longest
Night where people who passed while experiencing homelessness are honored and
remembered by those who loved and cared about them. There were ten names of
people experiencing homelessness and three of advocates who passed last year,
some very recently. There was a vigil held outside of the day shelter on the
evening of December 21st. We read each of their names, said
something about each and gave the opportunity for everyone present to speak if
they wished, and had a meal together afterwards. The service was heartfelt,
raw, emotional, and beautiful. It was nice to know that all across the country
others were being honored in the same way.
During
my time at the day shelter I’ve learned not to take things too personally.
Every day at service is very different and I can never expect anyone to treat
me in exactly the same way each day. There are days when some guests love me
and want to talk with me all day, a few days later those same guests could be
quiet or yelling at me for something that happened. It’s an unpredictable
environment. When I first started in August, there was a guest who was causing
problems left and right and since we never actually saw her causing these
problems, we only heard about the aftermath, we could never do anything except
sit with her, talk with her, and ask her to please try and do better for
everyone’s sanity (not in those exact words). A couple months ago she stopped
using and slowly got clean with help from religion, a counselor, and her
doctor. She has slowly changed over the last few months and I’ve seen her
transform into a troublemaker who screamed at me daily with personal,
emotionally charged attacks to someone who says to me over and over as I walk
by “I’m doing good! I’m being good! I appreciate you!” Now during this
transitional period, I would get reports from other guests that she was arguing
with guests or instigating fights and I would go to check on her and she would
repeat her mantra “I’m doing good!” in between yelling at other guests. I had
to tell her that while she had been doing well, this was not a good moment. I
told her I knew she was capable of better things than what she was currently
involved in and I asked her to walk away from situations more times than I can
count. Eventually, the process so slow I didn’t even realize it was happening,
she really was behaving well. I was completely impressed with her, and I told
her that. She had a really bad day one day when she couldn’t go to meet with
her counselor, she had coffee spilled all down her back by accident, she had
orange juice thrown at her at lunch, and after her third shower and change of
clothes that day she was exhausted from crying and feeling terribly about
everything that had happened. The staff and I told her “you had a really,
really bad day. Tomorrow will be better.” For the rest of the afternoon, every
time I walked passed her she smiled and said “tomorrow will be better!” I think
of this resilience and positivity on my most difficult days. The true highlight
for me, though, was when an older guest with memory loss was anxious and didn’t
know how to get to the overnight shelter at the end of the day a few days
before Christmas. I was looking around for someone heading that way who could
wait with him to enter the shelter and help him through the check-in process. I
asked a couple of people, but they either weren’t staying there or didn’t want
to take him. Understandably, it was a lot to handle. I was about ready to walk
him over myself when she looked up at me and asked what I was looking for. I
told her, and she quickly offered to take him. I explained to the man that she
would take him to the shelter and help him to check in. He agreed, making sure
he knew what he should be doing, and she looped her arm in his and said “Okay,
we can do this, let’s go now.” She informed me she would walk slowly so he
wouldn’t feel rushed. I watched as they walked away, just taking in the
kindness she had grown to possess. Not a lot of people could come full circle
in this way and I feel privileged to experience something so profound. I’ve
learned that, frustrating as it is, there can’t be a set number of chances for
someone to make a change in their life. This woman might have tried to get
clean countless times before and for some reason, this time, the fall of 2016, it’s
sticking. She had been asked to leave before, she has gotten on people’s nerves
countless times, she has manipulated situations and people, and even so, if
everyone had given up on her she wouldn’t be where she is today. I think that’s
pretty important.
During early
December I was fortunate enough to visit with extended family and my mother in
Colorado. That was my Christmas, as I spent Thanksgiving and Christmas day at
the shelter this year. For New Year’s Eve there were JV’s from Washington who
visited to see the Potato Drop in Boise- we got to check that off of our bucket
lists for this year! I’m so grateful to everyone who has supported me through
the holidays and made my first Christmas away from home so warm and memorable. Happy
Holidays from Boise!
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