A Heartfelt Thank You!

A Heartfelt Thank You!

To our incredible supporters and volunteers,

We are filled with deep gratitude for the overwhelming success of our recent BLOCK Party fundraiser. With this being the first time we could gather in person since 2019, we weren’t sure what to expect, but on May 17th, our community of donors and volunteers turned up to once again say YES to the BLOCK Project and to our mission of creating a compassionate and inclusive world.

Our BLOCK Captains, hailing from FSi, Heartland Construction, GGLO, Miller Hull, Starbucks, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Revolve Development and Evolution Projects and SHKS collectively raised over 160K for the BLOCK Project, 10K over our stated goal. To all our supporters of the BLOCK Party, your belief in Facing Homelessness creates permanent housing for our currently unsheltered neighbors.

We also cannot thank our volunteers enough. They showed up to help us set up, take pictures, record bids and make sure everyone had enough to eat and drink throughout the night. Your support made this event a success and reminded us of the power of what we can achieve when we come together.

Thanks to your collective efforts, we have raised vital funds to provide immediate support, essential resources, and life-changing opportunities to those experiencing homelessness through the BLOCK Project. Together, we are building a stronger foundation of support and compassion.

We are excited to keep you updated on what we accomplish this next year with your support. Let's continue this journey together, striving for a world where every person is seen, valued and loved, and everyone has a place to call home.

From the depths of our hearts, thank you!

A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit http://www.facinghomelessness.org/

and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU! #theblockproject #facinghomelessness #housing #CommunityPowered

invitingLOVE

Facing Homelessness is seeking new volunteer board members.

Facing Homelessness is a “Lead With Love” organization driven by respect and appreciation for our unhoused neighbors. Our programs represent radical ideas that have become proven solutions for bridging the divide between our housed and unhoused neighbors. We do this by inviting members of our long-term housed community to join us in participating in community solutions that create a safer and more equitable world for all and ultimately work to end homelessness.

We are seeking new volunteer board members to help us continue to scale our work. Board terms are three years. We are looking for people who have the time and energy to participate in board leadership and committees, with a special emphasis on fundraising.

Please contact us if you have skills/experience in the following areas, and are moved, as we are, to provide innovative, community-led solutions to the crisis of people living unhoused:
- Fundraising (private and public)
- Legislative advocacy and/or connections in local government
- Personal experience living unhoused
- Personal and/or professional connection with people living unhoused
- Personal experience navigating culturally marginalized identity or identities

The Facing Homelessness board is committed to equity, diversity, inclusion, and anti-racism. We recognize the need for diverse perspectives informed by lived experience, and we understand that all contributors speak from their own unique experiences and are not responsible for representing an entire group on the basis of identity.

For more details about the role and an application, please contact Najja Brown, Board Member, at najja@facinghomelessness.org.

achievingREGENERATION

Holy Cow! We’re thrilled to share a landmark achievement for the BLOCK Project: as of April 27th, 2023, The BLOCK Project officially accomplished Living Building Challenge Certification for BLOCK Home 009! This has been a huge undertaking and north star of The BLOCK Project since it started back in 2017.

What does this actually mean? The Living Building Challenge is the most rigorous environmental certification that exists, and aims to change the paradigm of our built environment from moving projects aimed at reducing environmental harm (what we commonly recognize as “sustainability”) to projects that create positive changes (“regeneration”) for a healing relationship and living future of the planet.

Cool! But why is this so important for the BLOCK Project? When we take a look at the intersections of homelessness and climate change, it’s clear that the impacts of pollution impact Black, indigenous and other communities of color as well as our unhoused communities most. It’s unfortunate that our current systems tend to force construction projects to build with cheaper, more environmentally harmful products that not only create less healthy buildings for those who occupy them, but additionally create harm where the products are being manufactured in polluting air, land, and water. For low income housing projects aimed at housing as many folks as possible, this often comes at the cost of health for the occupants, in quality of construction, and in distant locations where there’s limited visibility for harmful environmental manufacturing practices.

We’ve always built BLOCK Homes with the most healthy, durable, and environmentally conscious materials and features to create positive impacts not only for the Residents living in them, but for all participants to learn from and contribute towards a healing planet and living future. Through the Living Building Challenge, The BLOCK Project is tackling both housing insecurity and climate change that impacts our neighbors living outside most.

We could not have achieved this alone. All our partner consultants deserve a HUGE shout out and congratulations - the International Living Institute, Herrera Environmental Consultants, FSi Engineers, Berger Partnership, Miller Hull, BLOCK Architects, Arch|Nexus, Stone Soup Gardens, Hermanson, Plumbers without Borders (and more) - THANK YOU for your incredible heart, faith, gracious support and patience in making this certification possible after five years of effort. You are true models of the Facing Homelessness mission and values by demonstrating that when we work together we can face the seemingly impossible challenges in homelessness and climate change.

You can learn more about the Living Building Challenge Here:
https://living-future.org/lbc/

A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit
http://www.facinghomelessness.org/
and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!

#environment #regeneration #housing #FacingHomelessness #TheBLOCKProject #ecojustice #healthyhomes

What is Home?

“Home.”

It’s a word that can carry layered meanings for each of us. We’d like to share a beautiful reflection on the idea of HOME from our incredible Resource Navigator, Elena, who has recently completed her MSW practicum with us and who has offered SO MUCH support to our Window of Kindness community over the course of her time with us.

“In the last eight months, the meaning of home to me has truly grown. I have had the pleasure of joining our Window of Kindness and working alongside our clients every day. Our staff, volunteers, and clients work tirelessly to ensure that the Window of Kindness is a welcoming community and space where everyone can be their best and most AUTHENTIC selves. It has taught me that home is not necessarily a physical space, but rather the COMMUNITY you surround yourself with. To know that the Window of Kindness may play a small role in allowing our most vulnerable clients to feel a sense of community and belonging, despite the daily challenges they may be facing, has been the most rewarding part of my time at Facing Homelessness. I will truly miss the beautiful community that the Window of Kindness has created.”

artisticVIEW:

artisticVIEW:

“There are a lot of people out there that think you’re born an artist, but no, that’s not true at all, you can do anything, any skill, if you take the time to learn it.” ~ Dean

One of our regular friends at the Window, Dean, is a gifted artist who can paint and draw anything he desires. I met Dean three years ago, when I began working at the Window of Kindness. Shortly after meeting Dean, I told him how much I loved the animated series, Sailor Moon, and to my surprise, a little while later, he gifted me a beautiful painting of one of the characters, which I still cherish and have to this day.

Typically using acrylic paint, Dean paints solely for himself because of the passion and joy art provides him. Since art supplies are expensive, Dean doesn’t always have access to common painting tools. Instead, Dean comes up with unique and creative ways to bring his paintings to life. I saw him painting recently using the end of a plastic fork. The creativity and versatility he demonstrates with such a basic tool was amazing, but it pains me to see that he doesn’t have access to supplies he desires so he can continue to work on projects.

When we asked Dean about the inspiration behind his art, he shared with us “It’s the feeling that I get, if I could describe it. For the most part, it brings out my inner child, in the form of things I used to watch when I was little.”

One of the ways we’d like to continue to support Dean and other visitors who are interested in art is through providing art supplies at the Window of Kindness. When we asked Dean what kind of art supplies he would like to have, he shared that he’d love paint brushes, acrylic paint, and canvases to further his passion.

If you’d like to be part of this initiative, there are two ways you get involved! We always accept in kind donations of various art supplies so that our visitors can continue to express their passion in art. We’re also excited to share that we’re launching our Facing Homelessness Client Support Fund: If you’d like to support folks like Dean and other clients we work with, please consider donating. All funds will go directly to meeting the needs and passions of folks who live outside.

FH Client Support Fund: https://givebutter.com/FHClientSupportFund

You can also drop off/mail supplies to 4001 9th Ave NE, Seattle WA 98105. Please contact karina@facinghomelessness.org if you have any questions! Thanks everyone!

#art #FacingHomelessness #WindowofKindness #volunteering

introducingYOU!

If you’ve been with us for sometime, you know that our volunteers make everything we do possible. From handing out warm meals at the Window of Kindness, to insulating wall panels and raising roofs at the BLOCK Project, Facing Homelessness is truly a grassroots movement of caring, passionate, and action-oriented people who know that we all have a role to play in creating the standard of housing as a human right!

That’s why we’re starting a new monthly feature: Volunteer Voices. We want to celebrate the impact your volunteering has, both for our community of unhoused neighbors, and on YOU! Thank you to everyone who’s volunteered with us, once or hundreds of times, it always makes a difference.

Inspired to volunteer with Facing Homelessness? We are always looking to grow our team of dedicated volunteers like Erin. In fact, we have an orientation coming up on June 1. Learn more and sign up at https://facinghomelessness.volunteerhub.com/vv2/.

#volunteering #VolunteerVoices #Seattle #TheBLOCKProject #FacingHomelessness #grassroots

AppreciateCOMMUNITY

This month is Volunteer Appreciation Month, and we want to commemorate our wonderful volunteers! Our volunteers are truly what makes everything possible. They not only develop strong connections with our unhoused community through their compassion, but they help us ensure our programs always run smoothly. To showcase a small token of our appreciation for our volunteers’ phenomenal work, yesterday evening we hosted a celebration at Optimism Brewing Company in Capitol Hill, where volunteers from the BLOCK Project, the Window of Kindness, and the Companionship Program, gathered with our staff over food and drinks. It was a joyous experience for our staff to connect with our volunteers outside of our traditional hectic working hours. We are truly so grateful for all our volunteers who continuously show up for us and our unhoused community.

We very much look forward to more full community events throughout this year to continue celebrating each and every one of us.

If you feel inspired to join our movement, sign up for an orientation or volunteer shift at https://facinghomelessness.volunteerhub.com/vv2/ .

#volunteering #volunteerappreciation #volunteerappreciationmonth #FacingHomelessness #TheBLOCKProject

roofRAISING

WOW! It’s not just spring flowers that are popping up with blue skies and warmer weather: the BLOCK team has launched into tilting up BLOCK Home 15 and just look at what they’ve accomplished!

After several tenacious weeks of ground breaking and site prep, it’s incredible to see how quickly and beautifully this BLOCK Home is coming together. With our stellar volunteer groups, we’ve gotten the walls up, floor down, roof on and siding in place. Our BLOCK Home 15 hosts have been looking after everyone as well, with home baked snacks and actively joining our team on site.

As our fantastic volunteer Sinéad shared, “It struck me, as I was up a ladder, electric drill in hand, that I was literally helping to put a roof over someone’s head. It’s not often you get to say that.”

When we say it takes a community, this is what we mean! Working alongside our dedicated volunteers, fantastic Hosts and many generous partners that recognize that we all can chip in a little to provide someone a beautiful and safe place to call home.

A QUIET THOUGHT:

If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit http://www.facinghomelessness.org/ and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!

#housing #TheBLOCKProject #VolunteerPowered #DADU #YesInMyBackYard #FacingHomelessness

Haircuts, BBQ, and a New Place to Call Home

Dear Friends,

As many of you likely know, March is National Women’s History month! This month, we join many other nonprofits and organizations uplifting and celebrating the achievements of women throughout our own history here in the United States and abroad.

For me, it’s often easy to default to thinking most often about the exceptional yet familiar faces of women from our textbooks- Sacagawea, Susan B. Anthony, Harriet Tubman, Marie Curie, Rosa Parks and Malala are a few of the names that come to mind. This year I challenged myself to lean into learning beyond the women most often included in our conversations of what women’s suffrage and achievements looks like. I spent some time with Ida B. Wells and her bravery and tenacity in bringing to light lynchings in the South. I read up on Theresa Kachindamoto, a Malawi Chief who has in her tenure annulled 850 child marriages and is a stalwart advocate for education for all genders. Finally, I was inspired by Mia Yamamoto, a leading trans rights activist who was born in an Japanese-American Internment Camp during World War II and went on to become a passionate criminal defense lawyer who fought for clients who were most impacted by the criminal justice system.

On a much more local front, I want to take a moment to also recognize our team of incredible women on the Facing Homelessness Staff and Board. We are so incredibly lucky to have so many passionate, driven, intelligent and caring women leading us forward at every level of our organization. Facing Homelessness has taken great strides in the last year to fully close the gender wage gap within our organization as we recognize how often women across the workforce are expected to perform at the same or higher rates as their male colleagues and too often are still paid at only .8 (or .70 or .65 for black and hispanic women) to the dollar that their white male counterparts make.

The National Alliance to End Homelessness attributes the wage gap as one cause of homelessness and housing instability for women. While we know that men experience homelessness at higher rates than women, “homelessness experienced by women is made unique by their disproportionate experiences of gender-based violence including domestic violence, dating violence, stalking, human trafficking, and sexual assault, and is experienced both cisgender… and transgender women… Due to longstanding systemic racism and sexism, women’s homelessness is disproportionately experienced by BIPOC and LGBTQIA+ communities.” (National Alliance to End Homelessness)

This month, we’re highlighting two stories of women in our community who navigated their own experiences of housing instability to reach us: Jester, who shared her story with us on how she got connected to Facing Homelessness and became our newest BLOCK Resident, and Arianna Lyman, an incredible member of our volunteer community who has joined us in coming closer through hosting haircut events with an emphasis on self love and worth for our Window of Kindness clients. We have women and femmes in every sphere of our community here at Facing Homelessness: Window of Kindness volunteers, BLOCK Hosts, BLOCK shop volunteers, program partners, guests, and Residents. All of them, and you, contribute to making this community stronger, more vibrant, more loving and more inclusive. 

In love and solidarity,

Phoebe + The Facing Homelessness Team

feelingNew

“I love being able to help someone smile at themselves again, I love listening and seeing who each person is, because each individual, no matter their circumstance, is worthy of being here” - Arianna Lyman

Think back to the last time you got a new hairstyle. How did you feel? I assume maybe a little more confident, higher self-esteem, deeper self love? Maybe for some it’s not a haircut, but a massage, a pedicure, or maybe it's a day you give yourself to relax and not feel the pressure of getting your everyday tasks done, and giving yourself the time to feel beautiful in the skin you’re in. Most of us have the ability to get a haircut and find ways to refresh our look regularly, but that is not the case for our clients.

I’d like to introduce you to Arianna Lyman, who works under the business name Neon Margot Salon in Seattle and is a very gifted hairstylist. Arianna is a beautiful soul who believes that everyone should have the ability to feel good about themselves. Arianna first approached Facing Homelessness last year when she was searching for an organization focused on homelessness, as she felt compelled to get involved by using her skills as a beautician in a way that could make a difference in our community. Arianna wants to turn her passion projects, titled “Best Day Ever” events, into something sustainable and hopefully one day integrate them into a larger part of her career. Arianna sees that when we look good on the outside, we feel more able to be seen and worthy of connection and love, and when we have love and connection in our lives, we are naturally brought to a place where we can be our best selves. This is why Arianna feels passionate about volunteering her time and skillset - this work resonates with her and simultaneously impacts our unhoused clients in important ways that may be overlooked when we consider the needs of those living on the streets.

From the beginning, Arianna has been incredibly generous in sharing her story. She has not only experienced housing instability herself, but her sister Ronda, who is now deceased, came into her life through foster care which impacted their lives well into adulthood and still informs Arianna’s viewpoint. Arianna has also shared with us about her own struggles with addiction and homelessness, and how she holds her sister Ronda’s memory and life experiences close in her heart. Her deep compassion is a source of love from which she draws to help communities who don’t have the financial resources to receive these services.

On Saturday March 4th, Arianna hosted her third haircutting event right on the patio of The Window of Kindness. Arianna is a big believer in community, and as such, she also connected us with Demond, who is an experienced chef and is opening up his own restaurant, Dirty Bird Woodfire right off of Leary Way in Seattle. Demond brought smoked brisket, pulled pork, mac & cheese, and coleslaw, which was a perfect addition to everything we had going on that day. Together, these two turned a rainy, cold, and what some of our visitors could call a miserable day, into a day filled with love, new connections, delicious food and some excellent new looks. Within 5 hours, Arianna was able to give 8 haircuts, and by the end of the day, all of the food was gone!

While many services are offered in the city of Seattle for folks who live outside, it’s rare for our unhoused neighbors to have access to such amazing food, or get the unconditional feeling of connection and care that comes from receiving a haircut from someone like Arianna. Facing Homelessness’ amazing community of volunteers makes this possible with their time, attention, and love. Thank you all for showing up as your true selves and contributing your authentic passion and skills, and making our work not only possible, but expanding on what we are able to provide. So much LOVE to all of you!

Would you like to contribute to a special event at Facing Homelessness? If so, please contact Karina@facinghomelessness.org

With so much love,

University District |Karina, Phoebe, Caroline

A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit http://www.facinghomelessness.org/
and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!
#JustSayHello #FacingHomelessness #Kindness #theblockproject

sharingSOVEREIGNTY

sharingSOVEREIGNTY

“This place is home. I feel it in my bones.”

I met Jester on a gray, rainy day in Duvall. You wouldn’t think it when you look at her, with her quick smile and engaging laugh, but it’s taken an enormous amount of strength and resilience over the past few years for Jester to be sitting with me in this cafe.

Jester hails from the South, born and raised in a state with limited access to Medicare and disability support for folks like Jester who have navigated not only chronic illness and challenging mental health diagnoses, but domestic violence at home and uncompensated work.

“I was 26, I wasn't allowed to decorate my apartment. I wasn't allowed to pick out certain things to eat. There's like a whole bunch of things that were really controlled, even though I was an adult… my mental and physical health started to tank.”

Jester shared with me that she knew, deep down, that Washington was where she was meant to be. “I knew I needed [to come] because the University of Washington has way more resources, there's Medicaid here, better food: there's so many other things that were so necessary, and the thing is, in my soul, this was a necessary change. Because if you're going to be anywhere, it has to be where you have an opportunity and a chance.”

Jester’s passions are horticulture and crafts. She’s a maker and sharer. She takes great pride in what she can create for herself and hopes to share those talents with others around her.

I’m sure Jester’s sentiment resonates with many of us. We’re raised with the belief that America is where anything is possible, where we can come from any background and achieve independence and stability all on our own. We yearn to create community, to be independent and able to engage in things we love, with people who we love.

“At first I thought I could transfer jobs here,” Jester recounts, but that didn’t work out. Under the stress and fatigue of coercive control both at home and at work, Jester’s physical and mental health were declining rapidly. “I was suffering from severe nightmares and night terrors. Like I was injuring myself because I was so scared. There were so many things going on. I had so many terrible ailments with my body that didn't really have a cure or a known cause, they were just kind of happening.

“My fatigue and my general health had just gotten so bad that it was like I could barely even read because I couldn't process and retain information and I was barely eating.”

Jester tried everything, calling numerous organizations as well as continuing her battle to get on disability support, but she kept getting the same answer: there was nothing for her. Her only option was to leave, and leave quickly.

Jester was brave enough to accept help from her former landlords, the few people in her life who recognized the toll her life was taking on her. They helped her get to Washington, “and the only thing that they asked is that I just pay it forward. It was scary because I had never been shown such kindness, not without a price tag attached to it, or an ulterior motive.”

Jester packed up her car and with the help of her landlord, was able to arrive in Washington. She had enough money for a short stay at a hotel, and from there she dove back into trying to find resources that would help her stabilize and heal. Unfortunately, Jester faced many of the challenges here that she initially faced back home. Being immunocompromised, she had very few options that would be safe and healthy places for her to live, especially during the Covid pandemic.

She recounts the response she got from many of the organizations she first called: “Oh, you have to be able to do this. Oh, you have to be able to work. Oh, you have to be able to do XYZ chores. Oh, you have to go to a shelter. What do you mean you have dietary needs and you’re immune compromised?” None of these options were really on the table for Jester, given her health restrictions and failing health.

Jester’s experience was what many people experiencing housing insecurity and homelessness face: that unless she was able to meet specific criteria, there was little for her. She didn’t give up though, she kept calling and searching, knowing that somewhere out there, there was an option for her.

The reason that I’m sitting here with Jester today is because eventually, on her long list of Seattle resources, she found and contacted Facing Homelessness. Thanks to Karina, our Community Programs Manager, and the generous support of our community over the years, we were able to get Jester connected to an Airbnb that allowed her to slow down, rest, nourish her body and recover. Jester also got connected to resources in her community that supported her physical and mental health.

Nearly eight months after first arriving in Washington, Jester’s chapter of transition and fighting to survive is coming to a wonderful, hopeful conclusion. She is joining our community of BLOCK Residents and finally has her own home that she can decorate to her tastes, and a garden she can grow fresh veggies in, and flowers to sell at farmers markets.

Jester has overcome so much, in part thanks to her incredible resiliency and in part thanks to kind people in her life who saw her fight and reached out to help. If you’re reading this, you may have donated funds to Facing Homelessness that helped build her BLOCK Home, or supported her in getting her Airbnb. And in reading this story, you see part of yourself in Jester, and that you also see your part in the community that rallied to help her.

So much gratitude for all of our community’s love and care,


University District Neighborhood| Clàudia, Phoebe & The Facing Homelessness Team


A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit http://www.facinghomelessness.org/ and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!
#JustSayHello #FacingHomelessness #Kindness #theblockproject

guidingLIGHTS

Update: This community never fails to shine and to guide us.

We posted earlier this week about the need for funds for our Welcome Home Kits. We want every new BLOCK Home Resident to begin their journey with us with the basics they’ll need to cook a warm meal, get some sleep on fresh bedding, and care for themselves and their new home. Our goal is to relieve new Residents of some of their worries - no need on day one to think about buying trash bags, toothpaste, or a mattress that fits in the space. We hope to give them the chance to rest after the intense stress of homelessness, to orient themselves to their new living situation, and to start the process of healing. Welcome Home Kits are at their core an offering from this community that says to our Residents: “you are wanted here, we care for you, and we are here if you need us.”

In just four days, our community showed up for us and collectively we raised over $2,000 for Welcome Home Kits. Wow!! That is enough to equip two BLOCK Homes! Even on the darkest days, when the fight to end homelessness feels daunting, the generosity this community demonstrates with your financial support, your volunteer hours, and your words of encouragement keeps us grounded and energized to keep going.

This week we celebrated the completion of a new BLOCK Home in Greenwood (pictured below). We will soon welcome the first Resident of this home and, thanks to you, it is being filled with physical manifestations of our collective care. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you!

If you are inspired to support, you still can! Our $5,000 goal will cover 5 BLOCK Homes, so donate today and help us fund 3 more Welcome Home Kits! https://givebutter.com/facinghomelessnesswelcomehomekit.

Thank you for all you do for our community in Seattle, and beyond.

University District | Phoebe, Angie, Caroline

welcomeHOME

welcomeHOME:

The landscaping tools are packed up, the electricity is switched on, and the dust settles after months of communal effort to build a new BLOCK Home. A literal labor of love is nearly ready to welcome a new Resident and soon one less person will be living without shelter in our community!

But before that first homecoming occurs, attention must be paid to the little things.

Our BLOCK Community team outfits the home with care: a pillow to lay your head on, a mattress and bed linens that fit the specificity of the space, custom made privacy curtains, induction cookware for the stove, a mug for a warm drink, cleaning supplies, toothpaste, toilet paper…Our “Welcome Home Kits” have everything one might need to be able to put down their burdens the first night, draw the curtains, and get some rest.

If you’ve experienced a move yourself, you know that these moments of transition are stressful at the best of times. Our goal is to give our new BLOCK Home Residents, many of whom have endured so, so much, the gift of worrying less about the details on move in day. The items in our Welcome Home Kits are tangible demonstrations of our love for our new neighbor and tell them they are part of a larger network of care. That’s where we invite you to join us.

Each full Welcome Home Kit costs $1,000 and our goal is to raise $5,000 for 5 BLOCK Homes. Today we are asking you to make a donation - for towels, and silverware, and blankets - but also for a fresh start in a beautiful, safe home for someone who needs it. Due to the very specific sizing and needs of the BLOCK homes, we cannot accept in-kind donations at this time, so please donate through the Givebutter link, or send a check with “Welcome Home Kit” in the memo line, and we’ll take it from there. Thank you for helping us transform houses into HOMES with your gift.

https://givebutter.com/facinghomelessnesswelcomehomekit

University District | Phoebe, Angie, Caroline

“Blowing in the Seattle Winds”; Reflection from our Communications Manager Clàudia, on her first outreach trip with Debbie Monda

“Blowing in the Seattle Winds”; Reflection from our Communications Manager Clàudia, on her first outreach trip with Debbie Monda

“I am just letting you know, what you will see here today will change you. It will probably overwhelm you, and ultimately change you”, said Debbie as we were pulling into a little bike lane that follows the I-90 bridge right next to Beacon Hill. We had already talked on the phone a couple of times before, and she said the same thing; I knew what she was talking about, I have been working in this field for over three years now, and I still feel shocked and sadness when I witness someone in crisis and how little support there is for them.;

Some experiences can only be described in pieces of songs that touch our souls, such as Bob Dylan’s 1963 “Blowing in the wind”. in my humble opinion, one of the best Folk- Blues songs that have been written. Written in times of protest, its a universal message of peace & dignity has appealed to so many across the world that it has been translated into 30 languages, I learned it in Catalan before I even understood where the US was on the map, or what a country was in the first place. And it accompanies this story as if it was composed to be its soundtrack. If you can, I encourage you to pull this song up and listen to it while you read this story.

It was a cold January day, as Debbie and I started walking underneath the I-90 bridge, right next to the Beacon Hill neighborhood. This was my first neighborhood in Seattle when I first moved here as a young adult. I remember passing by this place on a daily basis in my rusty Honda CRV from work to school, school to concerts, to uncertain days of protests in Capitol Hill. This place would always catch my eye, the well-carved scale on the mud at the encampment site, where tents and tarps stood erected against the rain, resilient, strong. I myself had a good friend who had lived in a similar situation not that long ago, and every time I pass that area, I think of them, and how they were able to sleep in those cold, windy conditions.

I heard of Debbie and Damian (her husband) when I started working at Facing Homelessness. The Seattle Times followed them for a year in their efforts to bring company and resources for our neighbors who are living outside. I feel lucky that I had such great ambassadors on my first outreach trip to witness and meet the folks who experience the worst of this humanitarian crisis here in Washington State, so close to home as we hear about shellings in Ukraine and genocide in China, and overall human beings living in an ever-changing world of climate change.

Debbie used a hiking pole to find balance, and I scrambled after her trying not to slip and fall as we made our way to visit her friends, a couple who have been together for the past ten years, let’s call them A and B. When we arrived, they greeted us with a hug. She was feeding their cats while he was cooking breakfast on a beautifully made fire that warmed our hands. Even though we were covered by tarps, every time we spoke our breaths became mist. The roaring sound of the highway next to us was so loud, that we basically had to yell to have a conversation. Debbie has known them for many years now; she made her a delicious home-made cheesecake for her belated birthday, and she carefully wrapped it to eat it later, as we chatted about their lives, they told me how they were made houseless; One went through a very difficult divorce, the other one got out of a complicated relationship. They both met at the former Jungle, and after the sweepings moved in together in this newer area.

They are both fighting very hard to get into housing, and make daily trips to food banks as well as keep in touch with case managers. They work hard at building and living their resilient life, as they take care of each other and also try to stay alive during very scary moments, such as an occasion of someone breaking into their tent in the middle of the night, where someone broke in their home.

On our last stop in Georgetown, we met Christy, is a very sweet woman who told me how she is already working on a housing voucher with her housing case manager, how she is excited, but also knows how these things take a long time. In the meanwhile, she lives in a tent alongside her friends, and they take care of each other. But it is very dangerous to be outside; Some months ago there was a homicide in the building right next to them... And then after we left, that night around 12 am, someone shot her two good friends in their car and killed them. It was just a few feet away from them, they heard everything. You can hear Christy and Debbie talking about it in a short interview on Channel 13 from last night; I am meeting Christy again on Monday to see how she is doing. But this very last piece of Dylan’s song, is for all of us to ask ourselves; Haven’t too many people already died? To remember the two human beings whose lives were taken, and to honor their existence.

Are you listening to that Bob Dylan song? Have you reached the line “Yes, and how many deaths will it take 'til he knows That too many people have died?” On DATE at TIME, two men were murdered at this encampment, shot through the windshield of their car while they were warming up from the cold. When Debbie said this experience might overwhelm me, she was right. In further reflection,What I truly feared, was to meet people that later would not be there anymore. Having worked in this field since the beginning of the pandemic, Ihave already met tooyoung people who are no longer with us.

These folks were lost too soon and without fairness or justice. While their circumstances were all different all of them were linked to the same underlying situation: the lack of accessibility to stable and safe housing, access to mental health and universal healthcare, lack of visibility in the system, and overall the very real dangers of exposure or random acts of violence that unfortunately accompany the experience of homelessness in this country. Follow me, as I continue going on outreach trips with Debbie and friends here at Facing Homelessness, and we slowly get to know our neighbors better.

Window of Kindness efforts in the midst of a flooding

Dear Community; As the imminent effects of climate change impact all of us across the globe in multiple ways, we know that the extreme floodings that we are experiencing here on the West Coast of this country are not an exception. That is why we would like you to hear the own reflections of our wonderful team members Karina Wallace (Community Programs Manager), Maja Evans (Community Programs Coordinator), and Elena Lecoq (our MSW Practicum Student | Resource Navigator here at Facing Homelessness) as they narrate how they turned the issue having our Window of Kindness closed due to the weather, into an outreaching opportunity in the encampments based on the surroundings of our building, where they were able to connect with new neighbors, share resources and spread the word about our services here at Facing Homelessness. Thank you very much, Karina, Maja, and Elena!!!

Elena Lecoq;

“Closing the window during the first week of the new year due to sewage issues was disappointing, but when Karina thought of doing an outreach event where many of our visitors are located, I was fully on board. It was special to meet folks right where they were instead of normally having folks coming to us. Many folks seemed surprised and excited when we arrived with pizza, sandwiches, water, soda, chips, and coats. Folks were smiling as they hurriedly called over their friends to come to grab some food from us. We were also able to connect with folks who have never heard of Facing Homelessness before and provide them with information about our Window of Kindness Program. I hope to see them visit our window in the future and get to do more outreach events.”

Maja Evans;

I was so grateful we were able to bring the Window of Kindness to our clients when we were unable to use our office last week due to plumbing issues. One of our regular clients was kind enough to escort us to their encampment and spread the word amongst their neighbors and friends that we had food and supplies to give away. I'm always so blown away by how kind and understanding our clients are; this past week was no exception. Doing this outreach event made me think about how much effort our clients put into coming to our Window of Kindness, and I hope we're able to do more events like this so our clients can have more opportunities to rest in their encampments while also still receiving the food and supplies they need!

Karina Wallace;

I am so grateful for my colleagues Maja and Elena who jumped on their feet when they heard that I was hoping to do an outreach day around the University District, where a lot of our clients live. We have all been so devastated by the flood in our building that has prevented us from seeing our clients all week, so the fact that we were able to achieve this and share with our clients the much-needed supplies we had was unforgettable and is something that we wish and hope to do more of in the near future!

University District | Karina, Maja, Elena and Clàudia

A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit https://facinghomelessness.org/donate/

and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!

#JustSayHello #FacingHomelessness #Kindness #theblockproject

Mural Magic - It takes a Village!

On Saturday, October 8th, one of our long held dreams for The Window of Kindness came true! Thanks to the collaborative team at Color Speaks, funding from Gensler Architects and our wonderful volunteers, The Window of Kindness now has a mural! A special element of this project is that the Color Speaks team, Ryan and Sara, have created a model that gives communities the opportunity to design and create a mural together. This collaboration was incredibly important so our visitors continue to have a space that welcomes them, where they feel safe and have a sense of ownership and connection. This whole project exemplified exactly that. We hear often that our clients have very limited opportunities to be a part of decision making processes, so we were excited to partner with a company that took the time to involve our full community.

Ryan Shared, “I think what was really cool about this process, is that while it was designed, it was designed in collaboration with your clients, and so there was crowdsourcing in terms of what kind of subjects we could think about, what kind of art we could think about that would be well received and would be calming and create a space where people would want to be. I think that was the best part of it. And so the design was in community with your clients. And so I think that's really what drove a lot of our thinking.”

Sara added, “Yeah, I mean, that made it really special because before we had made a few concepts that we had thought like maybe this will resonate, and just concepts based on our initial conversations with Karina and Jennifer, but then they actually printed them and posted them and just started having conversations with your clients about what they like and what they wanted to see. One of the clients moved me, made me cry. They said something along the lines of, ‘We're surrounded by concrete and dirt all the time and we live in this beautiful city and we don't actually get to experience the nature of it.’ So from that point, we've pivoted to something that felt more like landscape…more literal nature…an urban oasis.”

There were so many beautiful moments of connection during the day. The sun was shining, there were fresh doughnuts and tons of donated pizza, for visitors and volunteers, and music which set a relaxing and also energizing tone. When our first shift of volunteers left, the speaker and the music went with them. As our visitors started to arrive in the afternoon for the Window of Kindness one of our regular visitors noted the lack of music. He then generously offered his speaker and became the DJ for the rest of the afternoon. This led to great conversations over everyone’s universal love of music and mutually loved songs and artists.

Throughout the event, we were reflecting on everyone who came to participate and how special it felt to be a part of something that’s dedicated to love, compassion, and belonging. Each individual, parents and their kiddos, clients and pets, staff and volunteers, came together to make this mural-magic happen. How beautiful our connection and relationships can be when we come together with open hearts! Whether housed or unhoused, we all have the opportunity to make a difference in our communities when working alongside each other, and that is the whole mission of Facing Homelessness.

We are so grateful to everyone who made the mural and the event possible; Our clients, volunteers, the Color Speaks Team, Gensler Architects and staff at Facing Homelessness. All of our programs are volunteer powered, and we are constantly reminded how deeply we are rooted in the community walking alongside us.

University District | Karina, Jennifer, Clàudia

A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit http://www.facinghomelessness.org/

and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!

#JustSayHello #FacingHomelessness #Kindness #theblockproject

The BLOCK Project in South Dakota with the NDN Collective!

Over the past year we have been working closely with the NDN Collective, an Indigenous-led non-profit in South Dakota, to provide two BLOCK Homes for their unhoused relatives. They will incorporate these homes into the “Mni Luzahan Village” being built this fall to further part of their mission to “develop Indigenous communities in a regenerative and sustainable manner based on our values and connection to land, culture, and identity”.

We will be shipping two BLOCK Home kits to Rapid City, SD this month and our staff will join NDN in October to assemble the homes so the housing will be ready before the winter weather comes. This is the first time BLOCK Homes will be assembled and placed outside of Seattle. The kits include a few alterations to the building design so that future residents are comfortable in the South Dakota climate. This is a beautiful new phase for all of us, and we couldn’t be more excited!

Leading up to this moment we have been fortunate to build alongside NDN. In August, several members came from all corners of the US to visit our BLOCK Shop and work closely with our team to learn about the beginning stages of BLOCK home production. While here, they attended our Open House celebration for the newest BLOCK Home in the beautiful Magnolia neighborhood to see the home and celebrate with our community.

Our Construction Project Manager Berns shared: “We were very pleased with NDN's visit. We loved building juniper rainscreens and decking with them at the BLOCK shop, and were honored they came to our open house at BH013”. This moment in the evolution of the BLOCK project enables Facing Homelessness to contribute to another aspect of NDN’s mission, “...to decolonize our minds, communities, and sovereign nations. The decolonization of our communities and people is directly related to our ability to prosper. Through the revitalization of our Indigenous ceremonies, culture, languages, and life ways we will continue to strengthen our identity, and break free from the oppressive systems that disconnect us from achieving the healing growth and connection to the spirit that is integral for us as Indigenous people.”

During a shared meal with the whole Facing Homelessness team on the last day of their visit, some very powerful thoughts were expressed and shared amongst all of us; What I believe will stay ingrained in my mind was the idea expressed by our NDN partners of acting as a “Stewards of light”; a spark and a resource. This was a beautiful articulation of their stated mission to “Build the collective power of Indigenous Peoples, communities, and Nations to exercise our inherent right to self-determination, while fostering a world that is built on a foundation of justice and equity for all people and the planet.”

What I heard from those conversations felt aligned with what Facing Homelessness aspires to do as well. To provide opportunities for community to use their talents, skills, and compassion to build connection and walk alongside our neighbors experiencing homelessness. Importantly, take that work beyond Facing Homelessness into the broader community . With engaged community we can solve a community crisis like homelessness. As NDN shared, it is not about creating more organizations, it is empowering one another to carry the mission forward and pass it on from community to community.

We are honored to have been invited by NDN to participate in the development of this safe and sacred space by providing BLOCK Homes are more than just four walls and a roof. They represent healing and support not just for Residents but for our communities.

In closing, please see the NDN Collective’s mission statement to give broader context for their work and values. Thank you so much for reading, and stay tuned as we continue revealing the new developments in this project!

OUR MISSION

Build the collective power of Indigenous Peoples, communities, and Nations to exercise our inherent right to self-determination, while fostering a world that is built on a foundation of justice and equity for all people and the planet.

DEFEND

We must continue to defend our people, communities, and nations against negative resource extraction that poisons our people pollutes our water, destroys our land, contributes to climate change, and violates our human rights. Doing this through organizing our communities, making our voices heard, and utilizing a wide variety of tactics is imperative in shifting the political and financial systems that are impacting our communities.

DEVELOP

We must continue to develop Indigenous communities in a regenerative and sustainable manner based on our values and connection to land, culture, and identity. We need to meet the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. We are doing this through regenerative community development, renewable energy investments, and social enterprise development.

DECOLONIZE

We must continue to decolonize our minds, communities, and sovereign nations. The decolonization of our communities and people is directly related to our ability to prosper. Through the revitalization of our Indigenous ceremonies, culture, languages, and life ways we will continue to strengthen our identity, and break free from the oppressive systems that disconnect us from achieving the healing growth and connection to the spirit that is integral for us as Indigenous people.

Clàudia, Berns & Jennifer, University District

A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit http://www.facinghomelessness.org/

and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!

#JustSayHello #FacingHomelessness #Kindness #theblockproject

Meet BLOCK Home Resident, Peter!

“I've been in a BLOCK Home for almost 2 years now. I still can't believe how fortunate this is. Thinking back to my life before having a place to exist on my own, I was obviously very unhappy and unwell. It's an odd and devastating thing, not having a place to belong. In my own hometown, a place I worked, lived, and made friends for years, I felt unwelcome, unwanted, and even hated at times because I didn't have a place I was allowed to be, everywhere you go is either someone else's property or a public space with restrictions and limitations.”

This is the way I was first introduced to Peter, a BLOCK Home resident, through a letter he wrote to the FH team. He has a beautiful way of putting his experiences into words, making them accessible to those who have never experienced housing instability, or homelessness. So that as a collective, we can start shifting the narrative of what causes homelessness and what it feels like to be in that place. His words also illustrate the resilience and support that a human being in such a situation must have, in order to not only survive, but find a way out and thrive. 

What I see as I listen to him, is a warrior, a very kind and smart individual who is currently working on his overall well-being, in part due to the stability that a permanent home and community support have provided as a foundation. I also see a family member who is intentional about finding ways to stay connected with his loved ones. His vision is for all of us to feel welcome in his world; a world where compassion, healing, and growth, as well as critical thinking, are the pillars of his daily life. 

I have always loved having a conversation of any kind over tea or coffee. It feels as if you have just entered an oasis, in the midst of a long and arduous journey. The day I met Peter had been hectic but when we connected over Zoom, our tea was ready and everything else faded away. It  was just two strangers in a quiet space, sharing vulnerable life experiences with the common goal of humanizing homelessness so that our lives in this society can be a bit more oasis-like, for all of us. 

During the first minutes of our talk, I asked about the paintings and decorations in his home. He shared that for a long time during his earlier adult years, he never dared to hang things on the wall because it was not guaranteed that he would be able to stay permanently. “Why get attached when you will have to leave?” 

I understood that thought pattern all too well. As a 27-year-old woman who has been living on her own since her early twenties, I have gotten used to never really getting rid of my moving boxes. I know it is not positive for my well-being, having to move every year. Through this conversation, I imagine what it might be like for someone in a similar circumstance, without the privilege of knowing what will happen next and without the community or resources to be safe and secure. How would I respond to living somewhere where I can’t display the photographs of my loved ones or have my plants and other important items that ground me? 

Peter shared with me later that day that it took him some time and work with his therapist to finally start hanging pictures and decorating his own space. And he has never felt happier, he says. Behind his gamer chair, I saw an orchid and I asked him its story. 

“So just recently, my sister and her boyfriend moved to Hawaii. And as they were finishing removing all that they had to take with them, they completely forgot this very special orchid by the window. It’s very special because it’s an orchid that they got when they started dating. A love orchid! So they were like, Hey bud. Here's a plant. Don’t let it die. Oh, no pressure though. And now it’s blooming!  And nowadays, I have more beautiful things surrounding me. I love this plant because it has a story from my sister.”

Peter also shared more about his journey to become a BLOCK Home Resident and what it has meant to have permanent supportive housing.  “Even though I was born here, I lived in other areas of the country. But 2018 came, and I moved back to my friend’s apartment. I lived with him for a year or so,  but then the whole housing situation changed, and I knew that I was going to have to leave. Then with time, this became even grimmer, because, with COVID, I was not making any money. And that’s when I realized… I’m going to be homeless again..”

He stayed in a shelter for a while, and accessed social services to start navigating a new route to take. 

“While I was at the shelter, … I worked as a transcriber with my computer and tried to stay sharp. Staying at a shelter is very hard. And then one day my counselor  mentioned the possibility of becoming a BLOCK Home resident. I realized, okay, this is going to change my life. At that time, I started preparing myself for what would come next, still, I had a hard time believing this could really happen!  And then she was like, ‘we're pretty sure we're gonna be able to get you in, it seems like it's gonna happen!’ -  But you know, I cannot operate in that headspace until it's actually happening. And it did!”

When talking about life in a BLOCK Home, and the changes he made to start this new chapter, I asked him how it felt to move into a small space, and to know that it would be his? He responded that it seemed as though he had always been inspired to live in a space like this. He does not need much, his requirements and needs when it comes to a home are minimal. He wants to know that his way of living is leaving the minimum footprint in our fighting planet. 

Peter has embarked on a journey of self-healing by accessing all the support he needed while enjoying the well-being that a permanent home provides, including re-connecting with his family. 

Using his talent and skills with computers, he created ways for his family to interact from a distance and through shared activities. He created a server where all his siblings can connect from anywhere in the US. Together they decorate houses  in their own virtual world, embark on missions, and talk about life. This is one of the biggest accomplishments that he has seen since he started living here, he says. It is an opportunity to enjoy time through games and is also so much more than that. 

"We've been able to talk about serious issues, about the world, the challenges we've shared, what our roles are in this life, and what we hope for in the future. I feel like I actually have a family now, which is truly remarkable considering how fractured our family and lives have been. The effect of all this has had positive compounding impacts on all our lives."

When Peter moved to the first BLOCK home, he focused on his mental health. It weighed on him as it does so many of us. The worst feeling to live with, based on his experience, is to feel as if you are a dead weight to friends and society. “But you must never cave into that feeling. It is simply not true. You exist, and that is enough!”  So when he started working at Amazon as a Shopper, he found the flexibility to shift his schedule when needed to take care of himself with no fear of losing his job. Peter Shared the following about his experience. 

“It seems people don't like to be reminded that our current way of life doesn't exactly work for or accommodate every unique individual. Despite it working for the vast majority of people, our collective method for navigating life, our standards for living, and social expectations have gaps and glitches at the edges and it can be haunting to be reminded of that, especially when it's going well for you. I don't blame people for feeling that way, why let a small few ruin or pop the bubble for everyone else, it's reasonable to protect that. However, in our hyper-connected world, what impacts one individual has a network effect on those around them, good and bad. In academic environments, workplaces, and even churches, whenever someone passes away, there is often a multitude of individuals and professionals called upon to support and encourage those impacted by the loss. What experience can be imagined for those that don't have that support, especially if a loved one is lost in a traumatic way, especially intentionally?

For good swathes of my life I've often felt like I didn't want to exist and didn't have hope for my future. At the very least I wanted to have a place to sleep and something useful to do, otherwise why be here?

Through my involvement with Facing Homelessness and the BLOCK Project, I've had an improvement in practically every aspect of my life. I no longer live minute by minute, I don't want to die every moment of the day, I can think about tomorrow, the day after, the week after, I can even plan things months out, and recently have begun thinking about the next few years of my life and what I'd like to accomplish. These are not trivial things, there are so many foundational and essential aspects of life that must be secure in order for any of those thoughts or dreams to matter and even be worth the thought. When you're hungry, that's the only thing you can think about, when you're tired with no safe place to rest, that's the only thing you can think about.

Another side-effect to having a safe place to live and even thrive is the network effect I mentioned before. I don't live in a vacuum, I have friends and family that are irrevocably intertwined in my life and who are impacted by my own outcome. I am happy to say I still cannot believe this is my life now. I talk with my family almost every single night over the internet. This is unprecedented in our family and was a very unlikely outcome, and yet we've never been this close and connected before. They don't have a suicidal brother to worry about and instead have an ally in their own journey through life. For that to even be possible I would need a place to do it, a device that can access the internet, an internet connection, and electricity to make all that happen. Again, these are not trivial things.

BLOCK Home provides so much more than just four walls and a roof, it provides stability to think about the future, it provides a safe place to exist and hopefully even grow, and it provides the means to connect and interact with others on equal footing. The value that adds to my life and to those around me is immeasurable, my life has objectively improved and with that so has my family's, I can't think of a more precious gift or contribution to the world.”

Peter, along with all of our other BLOCK Residents as well as our Window of Kindness visitors have, through their stories and engagement, shaped every single program at Facing Homelessness. We are most successful at addressing homelessness when we listen and engage with our neighbors most impacted. Thank you Peter, we are grateful for you.

A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit http://www.facinghomelessness.org/
and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!
#JustSayHello #FacingHomelessness #Kindness #theblockproject

Meet Facing Homelessness Community Members and Supporters, Sam and Siv! 

How did you get involved with Facing Homelessness?

Sam: The original connection was through our friend Michael Hebb. He was involved in getting a co-working space called the Cloud Room off the ground. I got something in an email from the Cloud Room about an event that was happening with Facing Homelessness and I thought it was compelling. At that time it was before anyone had built a BLOCK Home or anything like that. And I had a lot of questions. I had a meeting with Sara [former FH Executive Director] and we talked for an hour and she explained all the ins and outs and the vision and I thought it was a very compelling idea.

Siv: I think Sam came back from that meeting and he was he was pretty hopped up on the mission, what they were trying to do, and I think I was a little bit dubious of the idea that people in Seattle would be game to have tiny homes in their backyards - with strangers that had previously been living on the streets. And then we went to another event and had another meeting with Jennifer [FH Deputy Director] and Sara. And they won me over with some success stories about people who had already signed up to have homes built. I just thought it was really cool that people were really doing the anti-NIMBY thing. I was very moved by a lot of the stories they told and it challenged my cynicism.

What has surprised you about getting to know Facing Homelessness over the years?

Siv: That there's such a community that has supported this project and was down to welcome strangers into their backyards. Sam and I are both Seattle natives, born and raised, and I am aware of the stereotype of the “freeze”, the standoffishness. I do think that in Seattle, people can tend to be sort of standoffish, nice and polite, but not necessarily welcoming and certainly not welcoming into their private spaces. And this was such a stark rebuttal to that stereotype. And I think it's cool!

Sam: I think there's a lot of organizations out there who are constructing new housing for folks coming off of the streets. I feel like those organizations are large and they exist in a space where it's difficult for an everyday person to get involved. But the fact that an organization of Facing Homelessness’ scale works with a lot of volunteer power and is literally adding to the stock of homes - I think that is one of the most special things and unique things about this organization in my opinion.

Do you have a favorite experience with Facing Homelessness?

Sam: I really liked the time that I was able to spend at the BLOCK Shop before our child was born. I was incredibly impressed with Tomasz [Former BLOCK Shop Manager], who had built all of these jigs. His knowledge of the house and how it was coming together. Somebody made a little mistake on something and he said, “oh, it's no big deal. There's gonna be a piece of trim that covers that”, but the rest of us are just looking at a bunch of boards on a table. He had this incredibly well developed three dimensional image in his head of where everything was going to go. I'd love to get back and do more of that one day!

Siv: We hosted a sort of fundraiser for when y'all were trying to get the BLOCK Shop. It was really cool to invite our friends and family and let them hear from Jennifer what everything was about. I got to watch people have the same experience I had of dubiousness and then watch them be moved by the mission, by the grassroots outpouring of support that it had already in the community.

Why do you choose to support?

Siv: Sam and I are from Seattle and when you think about some of the most pressing problems facing the city, I think most people put homelessness at the top of the list. This city has gentrified and we're having the same housing shortage that a lot of big, urban, desirable, cutting edge tech cities are having. Facing Homelessness was an organization that we thought was tackling the problem in an interesting way. What Sam said earlier - it felt easy to get involved. It felt accessible for people like us who want to get involved. We'd like to give money and we’d maybe like to swing a hammer.

Sam: The BLOCK Project is adding housing units for people coming off the streets at the lowest cost for housing units out there. I don't think anyone's doing it at a lower price. And if you want to talk about affordable housing, bringing down the cost of creating those units has to be a part of the picture. And that's why it's a special organization that we have elected to support.

What are your hopes for the future of Seattle?

Sam: I would say it would be amazing if Seattle was the kind of place where someone could show up with a car or on a bus with a few dollars in their pocket and build a meaningful life for themselves. If we could create a city that provided those opportunities, I think that would be an incredible thing.

What advice would you give someone else thinking about getting involved?

Siv: Beyond just give, if you can, which of course is an obvious one. We did a fundraiser with family and friends. There's a feeling you get from writing a check to an organization that you support that feels really good. And there's a much greater feeling that you get when you do something with friends. This is something I really believe in - let me write an email to my close inner circle and explain why I'm moved by this. And to then see an outpouring from your inner circle...It's really moving and it’s sort of an opportunity to remind yourself I am an agent of change, but also like I'm connected with really great people who show up to support me and they show up to support organizations that I can give voice to. We did it for Sam's birthday and the number of people who we work with, our family and friends who gave small amounts. That's a super cool feeling.

Sam: I would also say, sometimes you just want to do something yourself, Sometimes you want to make a tangible contribution and there's absolutely lots of opportunities for that. Be they at the Window of Kindness, or learning how to build components at the BLOCK Shop, or going to a BLOCK Home site and digging trenches. There are lots of opportunities every week to get involved. And I'd encourage anyone who has some free time to do so.

Caring for One Another

Caring for One Another:

Each time there is an extreme weather event - whether it’s rain, snow, or extreme heat - I think about the times when I was homeless and fighting to stay awake, or begging to fall asleep, just to escape the reality of knowing that I didn’t have a place to call home, and that I couldn’t see a way out of my situation. This is a feeling that was felt through the streets amongst all of us who were experiencing homelessness. These situations are as real as it gets. The fact is, some of us have a home and some of us don’t and as we saw last week throughout the city, we, as a collective, can support one another throughout these times. We all have moments of needing community, services, and support, and last week with temperatures in the 90s and no easy way to get relief, was one of those moments.

Last Thursday, Facing Homelessness collaborated with hair stylist and artist Arianna (owner of the Cobra Syndicate hair Salon) and her partner Syd (owner of Kottu food truck) to provide a day of care for our Window of Kindness visitors as part of their “Best Day Ever” project. The event ran from 2-5 pm and Arianna and Syd, in addition to sharing their resources and talents, helped turn our parking lot into an oasis from the heat.

The event featured two free haircut stations, Syd’s food truck serving delicious burgers with side salads, many cold beverages donated by our community, a couch lounge area where our clients could relax, and most importantly, eight canopies that filled our whole parking lot with shade. Additional small businesses who supported this effort included Kendra from Monkey Grind Espresso and her partner Nick who set up a cold coffee station, Aurelio, who works at Rituel hair salon and provided additional haircutting as he does often in encampments, and Sarah Nayani, owner of Grow Girl -Seattle, who donated 12 gorgeous bouquets of flowers that made the space feel that much more warm and welcoming.

To all of these beautiful community members, including volunteers who helped us set up and break down the event, as well as those who donated their time, talent, and treasure, THANK YOU! It takes a village coming together to create a beautiful and caring environment such as this and to pivot when circumstances, like an extreme weather event, occur!

Clients had the space to relax, read, eat, listen to music, and everyone had the space to build new relationships and find moments of joy and connection whether through donating, being in service to one another, or sitting and having conversations.

We do want to acknowledge that while this was happening at Facing Homelessness, the City was facilitating sweeps and forcing people to move, many with no destination. As we imagine the future, we hope to see an end to these violent acts of exclusion and expulsion that only do more harm and reproduce trauma for folks experiencing homelessness. We hope instead to see more spaces of welcoming and community care, spaces for people to gather and receive the resources we all need including, housing, food security, safety, space to rest, compassion and community.

University District | Karina

A QUIET THOUGHT - If you're moved by the goodness of this community, please visit http://www.facinghomelessness.org/

and click on the 'donate' button and consider a "monthly recurring" donation of just $5 in support of the work. THANK YOU!

#JustSayHello #FacingHomelessness #Kindness #theblockprojectject