Story Archives 2010

Disabled/Racially Profiling express through song (THE SONG HERE Disabled Profiled by Leroy Moore & Keith Jones))

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Keith Jones and I have a lot in common. Both Black both have CP, both are activists and into Hip-Hop. We also both recently have been targets of racial/disabled profiling at hotels Keith in ATL & Leroy in Oakland. Now we went into studios and recorded a song, Disabled Profiled, about their experiences of being profiled as Black disabled men. Keith on the beats and mixed it and Leroy spits his poetry. More to come. This track is on the Krip-Hop/5th Battalion Ent's cd, Broken Bodies PBP, Police Brutality Profiling Mixtape that came out 2012

Keith Jones was profiled in ATL at a hotel in which he was staying at for a Krip--Hop event. He was using the computer and the guard thought he was homeless that led to Keith had to prove that he was staying there. And peeps know about my experiences in the Bay Area and in NY where I was approach by NYPD and store manager that said I was taking too long and was making them nervous. Listen to this song.

Leroy Moore

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Reflect Back (Poem after Krip-Hop Tour of ATL & NY)

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Reflect Back

Would u do it the same?
It’s a lonely path
But no one is to blame

Started alone
1 turned into a few then many
But who really gets it

Is it too complicated?
Should I write more on it?
I can feel it, it’s right

Some can’t hold the politics
Others see I
Few can put the pieces together
To view the bigger picture

Music like any art has become
A lonely profession
Art movements long gone

Am I holding on to the past?
Internet, home studios & start-ups
Are double edge swords

Brought it back to the people
But now people are inside
In individual houses
To come back outside with individual products

Still getting ripped off by others
Self-determination is not only selling yourself
Yes, Ray Charles was a musical genius
He was also a brilliant businessman

Can we learn from Blues elders
Or do we see them as just old & bitter
Artists/activists get it

What is it worth
Preaching to the choir
But the choir gives strength
When you feel alone on the road

Is there social justice in music
Not just talking about lyrics
Or will it remain private

Artists hire to entertain
Make people clap and dance
But not to think

Immortal Technique
Is a one-man island
Back to I and getting mines

Is it a catch 22
How did they do it back in the day
Still no one to blame
Sad to see our art has turned into a game

Living off art
It was done
The question is what is living
With today’s cost of living

Forget about MTV Videos
Big cars big rings all of that bling bling
Just pay my rent
Keep me out of nursing homes when I get old

Spread the wealth
With good health
Not just another cooperate franchise
Pulling down neighborhood’s worth

Not moving to Beverly Hills
Taking money out of banks
And put it into the People’s Union

Will the ripple turn into a wave
Not in my life time
But the time is coming

Am I ahead of my time
Or do I want to blend old to new
Anyway we see it
One thing is true things will change

Reflecting back
Looking forward
Feeling supported in the present
To continue this work

Knowing the fruits will be eaten
Food for thought for youth
As they grow into adulthood

Leroy Moore
11/12/10

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Landlessness and Colonization on a Waiting List

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Mad Man Marlon
Original Body

Picture credit http://www.firstnations.eu/indian_land.htm featured online firstnations.eu. "No Justice on Stolen Land," protest placard. Photo: anon

Poem is dedicated to Indigenous Elder Scholar, Myron Standing Bear and his struggle to receive his housing that was stolen from him by members of the San Francisco Housing Authority . He went from #1 to #564 on the S.F.H.A. Housing Waiting List for being Indian.

 

 

“We don’t work with Indians!”

“Never have, never will!" Is what they told him!”

Housing, a human right.

Houselessness, a moral wrong

Landlessness and colonization on a waiting list

Housing, a human right, but under authority while poor

A Day of Displacement to a dying indigenous scholar

Landlessness and colonization on a waiting list

No love from the world, except from his two sons

With only a car to call a comfort zone

By day, by night, asleep, with a growing fear

That one day

"Should I fail to awake, and my heart fails to beat

"Who then to care for my two sons?"

Where will the little land I call a car will go?

Landlessness and colonization on a waiting list

Thanksgiving was Thanks-taking.

Taking from one race to the other, and others.

“You’re illegal! You’re lazy! You’re inferior!”

“This land is ours to own. This is only yours to rent!”

Not apart of, but in an apartment. Housing Authority.

Who should dictate where one must stay?

Must one decide, then dictate by race and class

Of where one must lay?

Landlessness and colonization on a waiting list

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I had a home, now I have a counseling appointment

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Lola Bean
Original Body

As I'm walking down the street it's easy to get distracted in my mind.

The smell of fifty other guys mixed in with some kind of industrial cleaner is something I want to forget. I'm sleeping on the docks. I stopped staying in the missions. I don't like them.  People pass by and think I must be a drunk fisherman. The cops woke me up a few times. Since I don't have any warrants, they told me to just go back to sleep.

I start thinking about my disability claim I have pending. I had to stop doing day labor. I get muscle spasms if I do labor type jobs more than two or three days in a row. I get some money from the state and some food stamps while I'm waiting for my disability claim paper work to go through. It's not much but I've learned not to take anything for granted.

I think about the time before the recession.

I was at the Marriott Hotel working as a dishwasher. There were two other guys who worked with me. They had moved to the United States from China.  I didn’t speak any Chinese.  They were learning English, though and we worked well together. Sometimes I would prep food for special events.

Then the recession hits.

I get a job with a temp agency. Someone is on vacation visiting their family in India. They’ll be gone two or three months.

I’m not making enough money to pay my bills. My wife’s job has a big contract with Washington Mutual Bank that ends. Besides this, no one is hiring.

There’s a lot of talk on the news about the recession and the Washington Mutual meltdown. They say banks made loans that were too risky. They lent money for mortgages that should have never been approved. There wasn’t enough regulation the last five years. It’s also said that Washington Mutual took on the riskiest debt. Besides that, the stock market crashes.

The next two months are okay. I’m getting a lot of hours between my regular job and the temp agency. Everyone at the Marriott is worried. The people they cater to make five and six figure incomes, and they have stopped spending money. The first thing most people cut out of their budget is going out to eat and staying in hotels. My job’s customer base is gone.

The dishwasher I’m taking the place of comes back from India. The restaurant tells me they can’t hire me because business is bad, but they will keep me on until the end of the week. I start looking for work. The story is same all around Seattle and the Puget Sound. People are getting their hours cut and are losing their jobs. No one is hiring.

 I realize I have to back to work in Alaska. It’s time to start calling the fishing companies.

 I break the lease to my apartment. I’ve been there five years and was going to buy a house or condo when the lease was up in a few more months.  There’s a boat that is leaving a week after I have to move out. I'll have to stay at one of the missions while I'm waiting. We’ve got to put everything in storage.

 Me and my wife get a storage unit and rent a U-Haul van.

We use up just about every square inch of the storage unit. Everything gets packed in and stacked up to the ceiling. The storage unit looks like a big jigsaw puzzle. What we can't put into storage gets donated. We give a neighbor lady a bunch of food in our fridge so we don't have to throw it out. I think her name is Lisa. She says she'll take in our cat. I'm glad I won't have to take Chico to an animal shelter.

My wife will be going to live with her family in San Jose, CA While I'm in Alaska. I take her to the airport a couple days later.

There's a lot of new security at SeaTac. She has to get there early to make sure she can pass through security and have time to board the plane. We stop at a coffee shop down stairs and walk to the boarding area. I can only go so far with her without a ticket.

We kiss and say goodbye.

I take a bus back home. It's home for two more days any ways. I do some last minute cleaning. I don't want to leave the place a mess. There's some stuff nobody wanted and the Salvation Army wouldn't take in their truck. I guess they can't re-sell it. So I start throwing it in the dumpster. I start to think why did we need all this stuff'?

I get most of my old stuff thrown out and decide that's it for the day. The rest can wait for tomorrow. I do have one more day there. I go to Safeway and get some beer. I stop off at Papa Murphy's and get a pizza. I decide it’s time to eat and drink even if things aren't so merry.

I stay at a local homeless mission while the boat gears off for Salmon Season.

Then it's a ten day trip to Bristol Bay. The season starts off slow at first, then things get busy. We're all working sixteen hours a day and making our quota for a bonus most days. It looks like I'm going to be able to pay all my bills.

Then my back gets hurt. I try to work through the pain a few days. I have to leave early, can't afford to slip a disc. That would mess me up for life.

I see the Starbucks at Westlake Mall. I just walked there from the Urban Rest Stop, a place to take a shower and do laundry. I order my coffee and think, was that really a year ago? I look out the window and see teenage kids with dogs pan handling. People call them gutter punks and plaza rats. It’s said most of them are runaways. I’ve bought some food for some of them. I didn’t ask if they ran away from home because of abuse, didn’t want them to say I was getting too personal with them. It’s hard to see kids out here.

I've also filed for a divorce, but that’s a different story.

The state sent me a letter that said I have to go to counseling. I’ve got to make an appointment. That's where I'm headed to. I’m going to drink another cup of coffee first. 

Check out these articles and more on our sister sites at Real Change and the International Network of Street Newspapers: INSP Vendor Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/ INSP Main Website: http://www.street-papers.org/ Real Change Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/realchange/ Real Change Main Website: http://www.realchangenews.org/ 

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I am NOT a modern day slave!

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Lola Bean
Original Body

 

As I write this story I can now begin to sit back and recall the days when I drifted in and out of homelessness.  I found it to be very strange that one can become homeless, and even though I had been able to find gainful employment, I still found myself living in shelters. 

I had some difficulty finding employment, I was thinking why was it so hard for me to get a job?  I am a Veteran of the U.S Armed Services, so what is the problem? The crazy thing about it all was that people of color seemed to be the poorest of all. I would often wonder, Why?

I remember reading a report by the U.S Census they had stated the African Americans are the poorest in America.  I had to dig deeper and do research to find out why African Americans are poorer than most other groups of people.  The oppression of slavery had the deepest impact on the African American community.  Even today in 2010 many African Americans still live on or below the poverty line.

Growing up I lived in communities that had two parent households, but during the 1970s there was an attack on African American families.  The men in our community were forced out of work and school and into prisons. African American men suffer one of the highest school dropout rates in the country.  According to the Bureau of Labor and Statistics, 16% percent of African American men are unemployed.  And according to the US Census Bureau, 47% percent of African American men are incarcerated or on parole or probation.  Ebony Magazine, an African American national magazine, suggests this number is much higher.  African American women were forced into the welfare system, often having to play the roles of both mother and father.

I remember when I was a child people on the streets,  in shelters, standing in bread lines, sleeping in cars, in vans, in abandoned houses, as I got older, graduating from high school, then enlisting in the Navy and afterward.   I went through several months of hard luck, I was amongst America's down and out.
 

As I go through many African American neighborhoods today, not very much has changed.   I sit back and ponder on this a lot, and I keep asking myself, are we as African American men living in a new more modern day of slavery?

As I look at myself, now formerly homeless, I can recall the days when I was on the streets, having to been harassed by police, telling me to move on here and there.  I am now an advocate for homeless people. I fight for the civil rights of people in poverty.

I have been where the homeless have been. I am now with a street newspaper called Real Change, an advocacy Newspaper that educates the general public on homeless issues.  I also work with the National Coalition for the Homeless based in Washington DC, where I am connected with a street newspaper called Street Sense.  Now I am also a journalist for POOR Magazine and the International Network of Street Newspapers. 

But homelessness is an ongoing problem in America.  No matter who you are, you can become a victim of poverty.  Job losses, health problems, home foreclosures, abusive households, floods, earthquakes, and many other problems can create homelessness.  I focus on these issues and many, and I ask myself will this happen to me again?

Check out these articles and more on our sister sites at Real Change and the International Network of Street Newspapers: INSP Vendor Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/ INSP Main Website: http://www.street-papers.org/ Real Change Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/realchange/ Real Change Main Website: http://www.realchangenews.org/

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Swedish Hospital: The Cost of Truth

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Lola Bean
Original Body

 

The pretty and the grizzled, the kind and the embittered, all have lives and stories they have worked hard for that with God’s bidding may help other’s. In this process I survived to learn that fear comes in many forms, flavors and textures.

This story took place between 1988 and 1995. I was a lead Communication’s Specialist with the engineering department for Swedish Hospital Medical Center. The latter five years were a nightmarish experience I will never forget nor how it affected my future after that job. It followed me to my next job where I also worked very hard only to help cause me to be equally smeared and to fall further into depression, PTSD and a finally a schizophrenic break. PTSD grows out of this interminable pressure over periods of time.

For moments I only hear the click click click of the circular clock. Industrial cool white tube lights painfully overpower my vision leaving few shadows but for edges of computers and alarm systems on the console around me.

Absently for hours I now realize I am clenching my diaghram forgetting to breathe. I look into the reflection of monitors to see who is behind me at the plexiglass window. No one is there in this moment of tense respite. Soon an engineer or team of two walking by the window mouthing unheard explicatives through sarcastic smiles or making sleazy hand motions aimed at me will appear. Who knows what new round of cruel lies and engineered derision or death threats they have spread creating an entangling web around my weary life throughout this campus juggernaut.

I worked hard to protect and prevent blowing a whistle on the dangerous fryable asbestos “life and death” issue presented to myself and another I was aware of by one of our contractors; their was great concern expressed by him on a weekly basis. He could have lost his job had he talked to anyone else other than us Communications Specialists; I thought I would surely lose mine once my steely nerves gave way and which did happen leading an eventual future of mental illness. “Asbestos is estimated to account for 3,400 to 8,500 new lung cancer cases in the United States each year. The disease type Mesothelioma is a cancer of the lining of the lung, heart or abdomen.” (Goldberg, Persky & White P.C., The Mesothelioma Center, 2010, pg. 1)

I gave my department managers and supervisors many chances to correct this issue internally. They chose instead to fake studies with negative results and lie like well-heeled politicians. There were weeks of lies to save the hospital money and perhaps a bonus. A co worker who wanted revenge against the department called in OSHA. OSHA declared the situation all over the hospital very serious and so a long period of asbestos removal began. My manager called me into his office and asked me why I had to do this? He said, “We are all going to die some day.”

It all could have been avoided if the asbestos issue had been dealt with internally. But instead management tried to save money at the health risk of its mostly oblivious staff and contractors and patients who were all unaware. We were all exposed.

Click click click goes the circular moon-shaped clock. That continuous sound pounding coffin nails by the inch into a coffin three quarters in the ground already. The sweet smell of metal combined with the dull, creamy scent of oil based paint was all that permeated the air. It felt like there was nothing organic within miles but the orange peels left in the garbage can from dinner. And possibly what was left of myself.

For the first two years I was their welcomed, bright golden boy being greased for a lead position and an eventual recommendation for management. When I later was offered the supervisor position, I refused it do to the management philosophy of “divide and conquer” of the workforce and how they tried to make them feel “alone and on edge” so to avoid their uniting as a team and to close the union shop.

I feel as though I am waiting for Godot in a bank vault mausoleum. Ironically, the dispatch office used to be an old bank vault before Swedish gobbled it up. With the continual character assassination caused by lies fed to the hospital and human resources to get rid of me; also human resources lead me on that I could transfer to another department without any real intention of ever helping me at all; I felt my days of work to pay my bills, survive, and pay my college loans back were numbered and that I would end up pretty soon joining the growing numbers on the streets. A whistleblower basically has the “perspective of one who has been pushed not just out of the organization but halfway out of society, ending up with no career, no savings, no house, and no family.” (C. Fred Alford, Whistleblowers, Broken Lives and Organizational Power, pgs. 97-98)

Everywhere I see the maze of gray and white sprayed walls support this life-sucking fortress known as Swedish Medical Center . I feign a joke and a practical laugh to someone needing help at the window to my aft. Their ghostly eyes a disappearing reflection on the battery of monitors. For the next jump of time, I furiously dispatch needed work on the phone, respond to orchestras of unrelated and related alarms and finish writing work orders and organize calls for an undeserving skeleton crew of engineers.

Did I tell you I also did call cord repairs to help out Biomed, repaired canister vacuum cleaners and made extension cords for environmental services, and helped the engineers with an array of patient room needs, repairs in mechanical rooms and jump starts for desperate customers and staff wanting to depart. I did this to help get a break out of the dispatch office but to also help work get done expeditiously to help workers get their equipment back so they could get their work done in a timely manner. My goal was to aid other department’s desperate needs and keep work from being left waiting or forgotten in the daytime jumble. Yes, in addition I wrote all the training manuals and trained and oversaw the staff as a lead Communications Specialist.

Does that make me valuable? Since no one else bothered to do work to my knowledge beyond their job descriptions you might think so. Did my honed sense of humor gain points? Enough that they would pick me off slowly with an array of lies used as slow torture like how it was spread that I had AIDS disease, that I was gay, dumb, mean, evil—any lie they could use to make me a leper in the Swedish community. I forced snickers and cruel stares everywhere I went and most people stopped being friendly, or even talking to me. I was alone in that prison to face whatever cruelty they chose to dish out. Human Resources even asked me if I was going to ever get married? Even though I am straight, this was an illegal question they asked to see if I was gay which is what they perceived me as do to the lies and smear campaigns spread about me. SMC was known to be anti-homosexual. I stood up for gay worker's rights and anyone being targeted the best I could. I tried to put an end to the targeting of others (those before me as well until my number was called; I tried to put an end to this) so it would not happen in the future to other’s. This was an additional issue to the asbestos issue. When the lead engineer (who was a married, closet homosexual) took out his anger and frustrations on me, I tried to defend myself and could not get help. I was foolish to believe Human Resources would help. Instead when the lead swingshift engineer and other engineers next turned on me and targeted me, Human Resources turned on me as well because they went with the majority as it became too difficult to band-aid this disasterous situation. The other engineers were afraid of angering the lead, so they were forced to turn on me as well. I hoped to pay off my college loans and survive financially as I had no one to turn to, before I was destroyed by the smear campaign and falsely fomented rage aimed at me. A lot of this cruel targeting was caused by a really ignorant day dispatcher as well who had connections to the HR department and the Director's secretary. I just had to continue working under fire and kept it light with as much humor as I could conjure. It was only a matter of time as I was psychologically slipping away and would be permanently politically ruined and forced into banishment. “As a psychopathic creature, the corporation can neither recognize nor act upon moral reasons to refrain from harming others. Nothing in its legal makeup limits what it can do to others in pursuit of its selfish ends, and it is compelled to cause harm when the benefits of doing so outweigh the costs.” (Joel Bakan, The Corporation, the Corporation, the Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power, pg. 60)

Click click click went the mechanized cricket, a reminder that 5 hours in a frenzy of crazed, but mindful zen action engaged in the flow went by in what seemed like a few minutes. It is the end of a long shift (sometimes double shift) where I now gather my belongings robotically and flee this elongated coffin into the shadowy night’s bustle.

Shifting about at the bus stop, I restlessly gazed about at what the lamplit night might bring hoping to not be a victim of violence (I had been mugged and witnessed Crip gang attacks on my bus and in a bar where I lived) before the warm, lonely oasis of Metro arrived. I no longer hear the tick tocking of the dispatch clock and yet woke to the fact I am tense still and reluctant to breathe. With a large, forced exhultation of breath, I jumpstarted myself allowing color to return to my translucent face.

Over the years I would face repeated sexual harassment from the lead engineer and a seriously hostile work environment*; a collective attack on my person. Once collapsing from this job my despoiled reputation would be spread to my next job down Broadway at Safeway where I was then again targeted and driven to a schizophrenic break. My depression was pounded into PTSD which was pounded into a psychotic break over this course of years. Imagine this after knowing and being repeatedly told by your workers and management that you are the best communications specialist they had in the position. I oversaw all the dispatching employees with genuine care and concern. This series of events and attacks left me nearly homeless and in a state of isolation and complete desolation.

My parents and friends were freightened by my experiences and could not believe anyone would treat me that way. They knew what a kind soul I was. They were deep in denial. They repeatedly dismissed me and my serious troubles as if nothing were really wrong each time we met and that to mention it was a burden for them that they did not want to hear. They did not want to be bothered with the details either and so years of terror were dismissed with the proverbial wave of their hand. All the time I had become just a paycheck away from homelessness. I fell into a space where I was mostly alone and for almost a year I hardly could get out of bed. I had been diagnosed with Schizoaffective disorder, while my psychiatrist overlooked the crucial clinical depression and PTSD which was hardly recognized at the time thinking that only happened to war veterans. I spiraled further into darkness and there was little remorse.

Tick tick tick, How will I sleep tonight? How can I face a succession of tomorrow’s with no hope? I didn't realize this yet, but this was to be only the beginning of a series of nightmares that would last the next twenty years...

*Any action that materially affects the value of your job is an adverse employment action. A discharge is clearly adverse. A demotion, cut in pay, denial of promotion (if someone else gets that promotion), or denial of benefits would also be considered adverse. The Department of Labor will also recognize a claim against a "hostile work environment," although courts still disagree about what employer actions would make the workplace sufficiently "hostile." Other employer actions that have been held to be adverse and therefore against the law, include a refusal to hire or rehire, blacklisting, reduction in work hours, reassigning work, transfer, denial of overtime, assignment to undesirable shifts, reprimands, threats to discharge or blacklist, providing unfavorable reference, damaging financial credit, close supervision, unpleasant assignments, evicting from company housing, and a sudden drop in evaluation scores after the protected activity.

latest poem in reflection of 1995
I propose we listen
and not lie, hearing
feathery logic simply undone, lingering
between each morbid sigh.
I know what it is to caste the lowest die, ignored
for ignoble lattitudes, impertinent
energy from eltist idioms.
Impressed I am
into confined crystaline stature;
burned to ashes my pitiful sum.
and then blood sprays bright red
turbidly with new found
turgid fingers, full of life
and handfuls of joy,
bursting, releasing
from my old scuttled hulls,
screaming through shackled stature of
personally impaled statues;
ignored for a clutching century of
personally held breath, gasping
for new gathered life, ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh .

Check out these articles and more on our sister sites at Real Change and the International Network of Street Newspapers: INSP Vendor Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/ INSP Main Website: http://www.street-papers.org/ Real Change Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/realchange/ Real Change Main Website: http://www.realchangenews.org/ 

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A home is where you’re respected. Nickelsville is a home!

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Lola Bean
Original Body

A home is where you’re respected. Nickelsville is a home!

We enter the camp through the back alley. Immediately a sense of organization and protection is felt from all whom we come in contact with. We check in and are guided back to the community space where there will be others to talk to. As we walk to the other end of the campsite I pass several tents, faces peep out. Young face with innocent eyes peeping out at me. I know there are families in these tents. I am keenly aware of myself; everything I do, where my eyes fall, where my feet hit the concrete. I know this land is special and priceless for those who live here and look at me with curious glances, yet with a distinct air of distrust residing over the camp. I am an outsider, a status with a history of potentially bringing great harm onto the Nickelsville community. There is this undeniable sense, as though at any moment it could all end and anyone could be the cause.

As we approach the community living room area of the camp a fresh faced and bright eyed young woman is sitting in a chair along with a couple of others. We explain why we are there and that we are looking for anyone that wants to be interviewed about their experiences at Nickelsville. Erin Miller is her name and her words describe a place very unlike the images and ideas I have heard in the mainstream media. She challenges everything I have learned about Nickelsville in her first sentence. I know by the genuine look on her face and the very deliberate tone in her voice that she is the truth.

She explains to us how this is a family, a home, unlike any she has lived in before. Not only does everyone look out for each other, but the neighborhood around Nickelsville greatly benefits from their watchful eyes and concerned actions. It struck me how incredibly organized the camp was. Everything from food distribution to security duty to tent functionality is given a process and structure for implementation. There is a point person within the camp for anything that might come up or any camper who might need help or assistance with a camp related or life issue. Beyond the remarkable way the camp is planned and prepared and the inspiring ways the campers take accountability for their neighborhood’s safety and well being what hit me hardest was the strong sense of community and belonging they had cultivated at Nickelsville.

When Erin Miller describes the folks living at Nickelsville she explains to us with great pride how many skilled minds live there and have come from feeling like outsiders most of their lives, trying to find somewhere they belong. I immediately knew why Nichelsville existed. Memories of me sitting in my room alone, being yelled at for not being part of the family flooded my mind. “Why don’t I want to be with the family, why was I always locked in my room,” my father would demand to know. I couldn’t tell him that I hated his family; I hated his wife and all her children whom I consistently felt alienated and hurt by. It wasn’t their actions it was their thoughts, the way they saw the world and themselves in it. I would treasure the moments I got to escape and go back to my mom’s house for the week. A well needed rest from the harsh realities of my father’s family, one that mirrors the society we live in and not the community feel that Nickelsville offers its residents. Alone and isolated is what living in America has to offer the majority of its citizens. Seeing yourself as separate from others and in direct competition for resources and love. Not in Nickelsville though, a place that represented a location of safety and protection from the daily pressures of a Capitalistic society. A society where every man is for themselves; where any native culture and community is stripped in favor of hoarding and attaining as many resources as possible.

I knew that distinction well and when Erin said, “Cause this is our house, it’s our house and it’s different from any situation I’ve ever been in except when I was a kid at home,” it became even more clear. A home is where you are looked after and respected, not necessarily the place where wealth is accumulated. Although, my father’s house was warm and had four walls and a roof it never really felt like home. I knew I had to find my own home and what home meant to me, luckily I had my mother’s house to help figure that out, but everyone isn’t so lucky. Some people have never had a home until they find Nickelsville. Being an outsider is a lonely and segregated place that cuts people off from one of the most essential parts of being human, showing others your humanity and receiving theirs. I hadn’t seen so much humanity, so much caring and so much concern for fellow people in a very long time. Knowing Nickelsville and the amazing community they had created was in constant threat of losing its’ land was a rude awakening from the amazing words that fell from Erin Millers lips. How could anyone not see this was a place this large family needed and any others looking for a little support in a time when true community and a sense of belonging is a rarity.

Nickelsville has been made to move every two to six months for over two years, each time the mini-society they have created is devastatingly torn apart with no respect for the time and effort it took to create. Seattle has a long history of atrocities against the homeless communities of the city. Starting as far back as the mid 1930’s Seattle twice burnt down the wood and tin shacks of what was referred to in those years as “shanty towns” or “Hoovervilles”. It is estimated that those arsons burned down over 639 people’s homes living in the pop up town near where the sports stadiums are now located. Modern day arsons now consist of “sweeps” as the city calls them. Accompanied by arrests or detainment of Nickelsville residents and confiscation of the little possessions Nickelsville residents have managed to accrue. The despair of losing your belongings is no secret to anyone who has been robbed or had something lost or stolen, but to Nickelsville it is time, energy, and goods that they may never, ever be able to get back. Moving families is also a destructive force. Children are pulled away from their schools and friends over and over, being traumatized repeatedly. Stability for anyone is a necessity, but for young ones it is even more of a priority.

Nickelsville has been able to bounce back and recreate their community, which goes to show how incredibly important and necessary it is for the people who are part of it. I can’t help, but wonder where these families, these young eyes with entire lives ahead of them will end up if Nickelsville does not find a permanent location. What Nickelsville provides for its residents reaches well beyond the normal functioning of an average shelter or mission and many folks would lose an amazing community without it. Feeling alone and lost in the world is a horrible place to be, finding a family is not an easy task. It took me many years to find a community that allowed me to believe and see that it wasn’t my fault that I didn’t fit in or see things the way my father and his family did. I am lucky to have that support and confidence now. Without it I don’t know if I could face the world everyday with a brave face and an open heart.

I’ve got walls comin down
I've got noise all around
I'm hearin so much, so much sound
And I'm drownin, drownin now
And I can't see it clear
But I still have stear
And it feels like it's too much
And evils comin up the rear

And I'm drownin, drownin
Too much to fear
And I'm drownin, drownin
My make-up's smeared
Down hollow cheeks and snotty nose
All around, the noise, it grows
And help only feels like show
Cause no one really, really knows
or gets
or hears
unaware

Still I try
Nice to have someone on your side
Even if the noise they ride
I write,
They ride
I write,
They ride

Stormy seas of acidy insides
Billowing breeze
Blocking my mind's eye

Pressure headache
Pressure can't take
Falling all around me
So fake
I am to them
Hope I can swim to them
Cause I'm drownin, drownin                                                                                                                                                                                                                   In all of them

I don't even want to win
Giving up begins a trend
Filling up on others sins
Starting the descent begins
Harsh Winds
Dig In
Your heals
Try and stop the spinnin
Spin-in, Spin-in
Inside I spend when
The outside's too cold
Behind the door I fold

Cheery demeanor melts away
Tired and weary ends my day.

Check out these articles and more on our sister sites at Real Change and the International Network of Street Newspapers: INSP Vendor Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/ INSP Main Website: http://www.street-papers.org/ Real Change Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/realchange/ Real Change Main Website: http://www.realchangenews.org/

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Visioning Homefulness, alongside the scholars at POOR, has made me take spiritual leaps.

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
cayley
Original Body

     Visioning Homefulness alongside the scholars at POOR has made me take spiritual leaps.  It’s pushed me to think and feel more deeply about so many things—and recently safety nets have been on my mind. Class privilege looks like a million different things, but one of the aspects that has stood out most in my life is how much easier it is to move through the world knowing that I have a safety net ready to catch me. It’s at the other end of the telephone line, home:  the same phone number it’s always been, always in service, with family picking up when I call, asking what I need.

     There are different kinds of safety nets, and for me “home” offers more than one kind. It’s the incalculable kind of unconditional love, knowing that I’m not ever really going to be totally on my own because there are people who have always loved me. My home has always been free from abuse: when we hurt each other it’s always been the accidental injuries of not knowing how to love each other right. I don’t pretend that this is true of all homes, and I don’t take it for granted about mine. And then there’s the material part, the part about class, which is very real: home as a roof, home as a place where I can go and be fed, home as a car I can borrow. Home as people I can call if I need money, home as there’s-only-so-bad-it-can-get. Stability, safety, shelter.

     I read a story recently about a mother buying her child a pair of real diamond earrings, not because she cared about diamonds but because she wanted her kid to have something he could carry with him and pawn for enough money to buy a one-way ticket home, wherever he was, because then he’d always be okay. I feel like that kid sometimes.

     I have those material safety nets because my parents—my mom especially—do labor that is valued more than the labor that almost anyone else in the world does. They work really hard. Everyone works really hard. They offer me a safety net of home—of unconditional love, of material support—with a really profound generosity that I learn from every day. Everyone should be able to help build those kinds of safety nets for the people they love. I watch the hours my mom puts into her job, a job she likes sometimes, a job that asks too much of her—as most people’s jobs do—because she’s trying to make the safety nets foolproof. Or, maybe put another way, so that we don’t ever have to ask for help.

      But what Homefulness and POOR have asked me to understand is that real safety nets, the safety nets that are going to help us all survive, are different from the bank-account last-resorts that I have access to because of class privilege, because of the lopsided economic pyramid that’s harming all of us, killing us. Those kinds of safety nets can’t really save us, not from the spiritual bleakness and isolation that capitalism wedges between us. The real safety net is interdependence. Homefulness is a radical vision of a different kind of safety net: one piece of land in Oakland where a crew of poverty scholars, artists, revolutionaries, mamas, and kids will be able to catch each other, fingers locked together building something strong that’s a little less vulnerable to rent hikes, foreclosure, eviction, displacement. The land that POOR will take back is the raw material for a safety net of interdependence.

     My class privilege, and white privilege too, means my struggle to understand interdependence is going to be a particularly long and deep one. Class privilege does an incredible job of hiding all the labor that other people do so that rich people feel like we’re independent, like we’re doing it on our own. I have a hard time asking for help. I come from a family where people often walk out of the room before they start to cry. Often we don’t know how to ask for things that can’t be calculated, or paid for, or that leave us spiritually or emotionally indebted to each other. What I’m trying to learn every day is that those debts we owe each other are the fabric of real safety nets, those messy cords that enmesh us together too tight to pull away. Those are the kinds of safety nets I’ve learned about through Homefulness.

     I’m living at home right now, my toes curled tight around the fibers of the safety nets I grew up in, that have never left me. I’m deep in the struggle of building healthy relationships with my family, feeling the strain in my muscles as we try to figure each other out, try to ask loving and respectful things of each other. It’s really hard, sometimes harder than I thought it would be. But we are doing all of this on the stable footing of a home, a home we’ve always had and often shared. Our tender spots, our vulnerabilities, our anger, our distance, our laughter is playing out on a steady landscape of home. To me the Homefulness project is about chiseling out a hard-won piece of land from the predatory world of real estate and gentrification so that a family of POOR compas can have a home like that. Home is hard for me sometimes, it’s full of history and patterns and moments where I see the worst parts of myself rising to the surface too quickly. Homes are complicated, sometimes violent, sometimes brilliant. But at their best they can mean some stable footing where we have the time and space to figure each other out, for us to build together. I can only start to imagine how powerful a home will be for POOR, how the revolution of interdependence will keep expanding outward from a plot of un-stolen land. For me, as someone grown at the complicated collision-site of deep, deep love and isolating, ugly capitalism, it’s an indescribable honor to get to work with POOR to keep exploding and re-grounding our ideas about what home can be.

 

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spiritual reflection in a poem

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Lola Bean
Original Body

A Tesseract's Wings
Seeing built out of long river bends
A hypercube bursting out of being
Embracing charred reflections
Burned from red and blue impressions
A child accidentally realizing a butterflies' mortality
Adult's hands of stretched and torn repeated mirroring
...an assembly of mysterious yellow rejections
Built from faulty traditions...beheading rotten
statues of times without honor

Canceling credit for seven generations
Smashing crystal balls into feathered headbands
Rowing a rocket into a random and senseless universe,
God doesn't make the world this way--
We do. Can we all have spent time as whores
in weird and golden lives?
Did we look into microscopes of our old photographs
of stardust after their anticlimactic reports?
Finding a muse with prism x-ray visions
Perceiving time's loving abstractions;
Don't let her slip away,
My sweet I promise you emeralds in May,
Keep the love seat a warming testimonial,
a caress of your neck in honest prayer--
I'll be there in 5...

...trodden and bleeding blindness
stigmata to stamp a dreamer to death
unless he becomes a butterfly fast
without rest.
There is only a danger in false reflections,
Pools governed by Pilate's secret police~
Pretending without listening, their cruelest punchline...
Does it feel lonely?
We can only defy lethargic laws of entropy,
Jumping off a cliff to save our lives;
Society's velvet fool with a most benevolent smile
Garnering hopeful release
...dancing to "Indian Summer Sky"

Check out these articles and more on our sister sites at Real Change and the International Network of Street Newspapers: INSP Vendor Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/ INSP Main Website: http://www.street-papers.org/ Real Change Blog: http://www.insp-blog.org/realchange/ Real Change Main Website: http://www.realchangenews.org/ 

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