Most Saturday mornings, I stroll half a mile downhill from my tiny condominium in a bosky a part of San Francisco to a farmers market. My standard reverie of anticipation (about carrots with their tops hooked up, concerning the worth of berries) was interrupted not too long ago by the sight of three our bodies.
That’s, I considered them as our bodies; it was not evident whether or not they have been alive or useless. All lay splayed on the sidewalk, one a pair blocks from my dwelling, the opposite two, blocks aside, nearer to the market, itself situated in a neighborhood the place want is clear. (Meals stamps are sometimes the tender for purchasing produce.) The our bodies belonged to shabbily however absolutely dressed males — besides one man, who was lacking a shoe. Perhaps the boys are sleeping, I assumed, or unconscious from drink or medication. Or perhaps they’re useless. No person strolling by — together with me — slowed down to concentrate to them, past a look.
For many years, encountering such a scene, I used to cease, then wait to see a leg twitch, a chest rise. I hardly ever do even that anymore. In highschool, I had learn with shock that poor individuals in India, individuals with no dwelling, slept on the sidewalk, whereas others simply walked by. How terrible of these others, I bear in mind considering. How might they dwell with themselves? The reproach has come dwelling. We’ve gotten used to homelessness — the homelessness of others.
I guessed the three males on that latest Saturday had no houses, however from a few years interviewing a previously homeless man who’s now a civic chief in San Francisco, I discovered to not rush to conclusions. Del Seymour, right now identified regionally because the mayor of the Tenderloin, taught me {that a} man mendacity along with his eyes closed on a sidewalk might have a house, however maybe was interrupted by temptation or a medical scenario on his approach there. I additionally discovered from Del, to my preliminary shock, that some homeless individuals work full-time jobs. I’ve discovered rather a lot about homelessness, principally from him, but additionally from my every day Google alert for the phrase within the information.
As a result of these alerts are so hardly ever encouraging, one seeming spark of excellent information not too long ago stood out. In Los Angeles County, in keeping with newly launched statistics about 2024, the variety of deaths among the many homeless inhabitants decreased from 2023. Yay! I assumed. The myriad packages are working! Whether or not naloxone intervention or tiny homes or new shelters or different efforts (free job coaching like Del initiated in San Francisco?) are to reward, I felt a surge of hope. Then I learn extra intently.
Deaths amongst unhoused people in L.A. County had fallen in 2024 to not 100 or so, as I naively hoped, however to 2,208. A development in the correct route, sure. A trigger for celebration, no.
Far too many individuals know firsthand the emotional and bodily grind of homelessness. Just about all different Californians comprehend it secondhand and have most likely requested themselves the identical query: What’s a (presumably well-meaning) housed particular person to do in response to the sight of an unhoused particular person, to not point out many unhoused individuals? I do know of a nurse in San Francisco who screeches her automotive to a cease when she spots an individual in bodily misery and administers CPR if acceptable. I like her motion, however doubt I might replicate it.
Granted, my very own principal and cussed response, to spend almost a decade writing a ebook concerning the topic within the hope it should have a useful influence, isn’t a route accessible or engaging to many. And shorter time period efforts, resembling volunteering at native nonprofits, definitely have extra rapid outcomes. One widespread impulse, through which I participate, if insufficiently and awkwardly, is to offer somebody meals or cash, or name 911 when somebody clearly wants assist.
But any pedestrian, particularly any feminine pedestrian, will attest that the impulse to assist somebody on the sidewalk turns into tougher if that somebody is awake, and male. Will an providing result in a spit, a scream, a chase? Ought to we keep away from eye contact and stroll on? Not essentially.
What I’ve discovered from Del is to supply one thing that will imply greater than a greenback or a sandwich: Say hey.
Acknowledge the particular person whose face is a number of ft beneath your personal. This particular person is a part of a household, “someone’s son, someone’s auntie,” Del’s litany goes, and stays a human being. Remind your self of that. Extra importantly, remind them. Del provides: Don’t cease if the particular person appears “nuts,” his loved foray into politically incorrect phrasing. In any other case, decelerate for just a few seconds, perhaps longer. In some unspecified time in the future, over time, and the identical route, you may acknowledge each other and really have a dialog. In the meantime, preserve it fundamental, however say one thing.
I obey. Usually, simply “Hello.”
Virtually all the time comes an incalculably beneficiant reward: a smile and a greeting returned. Humbled, I transfer on, once more resolved to not let our unhoused neighbors really feel invisible, nor to neglect that homelessness is, amongst different adjectives, irregular.
Alison Owings is the writer of “Mayor of the Tenderloin: Del Seymour’s Journey From Residing on the Streets to Preventing Homelessness in San Francisco.”
