Imagine if Telling the Truth Made You Homeless
Imagine if we told the truth, and demanded the truth. There’s no doubt in my mind that the culture of clericalism is enmeshed in all of the stories of abuse and exploitation and cover-up that we hear. At the same time, the Superior General of the Congregation of the Mission — the successor of St. Vincent — is asking us to build a new culture of vocations. To what kind of Church is God calling people today? A simple one. A humble one. A meek one. A self-disciplined one. A passionate, tireless one. Imagine.
A little less than five years ago, Israel Beyer wrote what follows. Read it through. Feel that sadness. Feel the threat. You’ll wonder where I’m going with this. I’ll ask three hard questions at the end.
Imagine for a moment that you were faced with the experience of being homeless and had nowhere else to turn.
Where should I go?
You find a local shelter, but a woman half your age at the counter lets you know that the shelter tonight is full. She takes your name and says to check in tomorrow and maybe something will come available.
âI have no place to go,â you tell the shelter worker. âHow can there not be enough shelter beds?â
âRight now, weâre dealing with a large number of people sleeping outside, maâam,â the shelter worker tells you. âWeâre doing everything we can.â
The woman offers you a blanket. You take it.
You knew that times were tough. You wouldnât be in this situation if you hadnât known that, but the idea of literally not having a place to call home is more than a little overwhelming at the moment.
You have everything you own on your back. Everything else was either thrown out in the eviction or you left it with your sister, who as hard as it was to do, also asked you to leave because there simply werenât enough resources for you to stay there any longer.
You walk.
Should I sleep in plain eyesight of people, or should I tuck myself away where itâs hidden?
You find out quickly that sleeping under a bridge near the river feels unsafe and means sleeping with rodents. This is unacceptable, you think to yourself. You canât imagine how anyone could stand it. Rats. It gives you chills just thinking about them scurrying in the park.
If I sleep downtown I will feel unsafe. If I sleep in the neighborhoods, I will have to sleep on someoneâs property. I may scare people. How can I scare people? I use to be one of those people.
You begin to realize the noise. It never seems to stop. You wonder where one goes just to find some solace and to collect their thoughts.
Should I sleep alone, or with a group of people? I donât know anyone.
You begin to panic and your heart starts to race. The anxiety that has overcome you over the past several months as you were losing your home has returned. You have to sit down and simply breathe. You feel a panic attack coming on, but nowâs not the time to be paralyzed by fear. Your thoughts are racing so fast itâs hard to even concentrate. Your entire body is tense.
Should I spend my last $50 on a hotel and think this through? What if the hotel isnât safe? Iâm sure it has bed bugs.
You start to lose daylight. You walk near an abandoned business where you see several other people bedding down. You ask if itâs OK to sleep there too. No one seems to mind.
You ask if thereâs a restroom around. Someone hollers, âFour blocks down, but sometimes the gate is locked.â
You go to the restroom. Thank goodness, itâs open.
A stainless steel sink and toilet with no seat cover stares back at you. The narrow concrete walls feel like they are closing in on you. There is no toilet paper.
Given the circumstances, you do your best to navigate in the small restroom with your backpack and blanket. You change into your last pair of clean socks and underwear. You decide to throw the others away. You clean your hands and face with cold water and walk out into the night. The cool air hits your face. You still feel dingy.
You bed down. Youâre lucky to have found an awning to shelter you from the rain. You try to sleep, but the concrete, your backpack for a pillow and the blanket you have are little comfort. You slip into an imaginary state, dreaming of better days, even as you wake up and acknowledge every single sound.
Groups of people walk by, laughter ensues. You remember a time when life was carefree and simple. You hear the moans of the man sleeping closest to you. They terrify you. The moans last all night. They will stay with you.
The sounds of cars and trucks driving by keep you awake. Itâs almost impossible to sleep given the circumstances. The late hours of the night bring large crowds of people coming and going from local bars until closing time. You feel vulnerable.
Someone makes a sideways comment about all of the bums downtown. You feel small.
You estimate that on your first night sleeping outside downtown that there was around two hours of silence, between the time when the bars closed and when the sounds of the delivery trucks started to arrive. You wake up slowly. Your back hurts. Your feet are tired. You are exhausted. The day is just beginning.
By noon, you notice sleep depravation setting in. If you were thinking clearly before and panicked about the circumstance that you found yourself in, now you are just a walking shell of yourself. You become disoriented. Dehydrated.
Possibly youâve been able to maintain your hygiene; possibly youâve let it go. A group of people near the Greyhound Bus Depot tell you where the soup kitchens are, what places may or may not have a place to shower, and where you may go to find some help. You go back to the shelter and ask if anything has become available. Nothing.
You feel hopeless. You realize that the living hell you find yourself in may not end anytime soon. You start to feel disconnected from everyone and everything around you. You think about asking a stranger to borrow their cell phone to call a family member, but what would you say. Everything is surreal.
The thought of actually taking your own life enters your mind for the first time.
I couldnât.
You walk through the city alone. You go to the library but people clearly donât want to have anything to do with you. Some people are kind enough to say hi and show compassion. You catch the eye of someone walking out of the library.
âSir, do you have a dollar or two to spare. I just became homeless and I really donât know what else to do.â
You remember the time when your father took someone a lot like yourself out to eat at a local café. You remember feeling uncomfortable and being embarrassed that your friends might see you with your father and a homeless man. You feel guilty for being mean to your father after the dinner. You wish someone with his kindness would appear before you now.
Am I going crazy?
The constant dampness makes you feel like you are carrying a hundred pounds of extra weight. You imagine a nice hot bubble bath with candles and watching meaningless sitcoms for hours on a couch with a big furry blanket.
Then the rain turns into a downpour and you are forced to huddle under a downtown bus stop. Your socks and shoes are soaked. You feel your feet beginning to wilt. You start to get a chill and feel a sickness coming on.
What does someone do if they get sick? I canât handle this, I just canât.
You let it all go and begin to cry. An affluent businessman with an umbrella walks past. Young students looking at their phones pass you by. You are invisible to them.
It feels like the only person youâve talked to in days are the voices in your head. The loneliness you feel is unbearable.
You see a police officer and ask him for help. He gives you the address of the shelter where youâve already been.
âThey donât have anything available right now. Where should I go?â
The officer shrugs and walks away. âHave a nice day.â
You take a deep breath and sigh. A mother walks past you with her child. She pulls her close, shielding you from her as you both make eye contact. Your dignity is stripped away, little by little, with every passing person.
Your feet begin to swell, but you continuing walking.
You learn from talking to a newfound friend on the streets that you could actually go to jail for being homeless, or sitting down on the sidewalk. He lists off so many different laws that the police could use against you that you canât even comprehend what he is saying, or remember what they all are or what they mean.
For a moment you think to yourself, jail might be better than this. At least you could get dry. The thought scares you.
Another man on the streets offers you a place back at his camp, but you decline, not knowing if you can trust this person. He came on a little too strong.
Realizing that there are hundreds of people just like you wondering the streets, you do everything in your power to hold onto any last shred of hope you have. You have to keep your head straight. Hopefully, things will turn around tomorrow. They must.
Itâs overwhelming just to think about.
- Am I willing to help rebuild a broken church structure and an infected priesthood to receive the vocations that God is calling?
- Would I risk losing everything to do that?
- Would you let me in?
Itâs overwhelming just to think about. I would have nothing left. Only holy truth. And holy poverty. And True Bread. And True Drink. (John 6). Would you let me in?
excellent thought for all of us. Thanks.