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Traci Sims Oct 2020
And so he sat next to me,
his bloodhound pacing the bus floor,
Round and round in a tight circle,
before settling at our feet.
Sadness hung on the young man
like a soggy blanket,
And my
observation, sharpened by intuition
led me to venture...
"It's cold out tonight."
He startled and smiled: "Why yes, yes it is".

(What do we do for the downtrodden?)

"Is this the bus to Capitol Hill?
I'm going to buy groceries,
my boy here is hungry  and I hope one is still open".
I looked at him closely
"No, this one goes to Queen Anne,
everything's closed for the evening.
Maybe I'm wrong,
I don't think you're okay,
Somehow I know
you're not telling the truth".

He sighed and shrank into himself,
"You guessed right-- I am homeless,
On the streets for a year now.
Me and my buddy,
with no end in sight".

(What do we do for the downtrodden?)

"They took all my things
when my car was broke into,
My entire world shattered with the blow of a hammer,
But at least I've got him,
and he glanced towards his companion,
I'll find a warm vent,
and we'll sit there til morning."

Bartell's was still open
and I opened my wallet,
Some soup, of course, dog food,
roast beef hash and hot tea,
"Please find a good doctor, there are many to help you,
I can tell that you're suffering, give you and buddy a new life."
He thanked me and with a whistle
called the bloodhound to him,
They turned right towards Lake Union,
Fading into the night.

(What do we do for the downtrodden?)
This is a true story that I experienced 10/23/20.
Inspirational Music:"Eleanor Rigby"--The Beatles
Traveler Oct 2020
A couple of rats laughing
In the height of rodent prime
Just inside the walls
In the panelling confines

Sour milk and cheese
The sent of rotten meat
It’s freezing in the alley
Behind the trash pile heaps

Dwellings made of boxes
House the forgotten meek
Closed face and forbidden
As we pass them on the streets

A polite yet impaired man
Stays deep in the forest down the road
I gave him a ride from his tent
In the woods to the store
Behind his eyes he was broken
As he spoke of happy things
He asked me to come back and join him
But I had to run away
Traveler Tim

It’s true
rats laugh proven and a science lab.
Zoe Mae Sep 2020
Trash heap
Fast asleep
Walk right past
Make it fast
Cross the street
Eyes on feet
Don't dare see
What could be me
I witnessed this occur a little while ago and it stayed with me. I could have easily been that person if not for help from family. Everyone who's ever succeeded at anything, had at least a little help. Some people don't have that support. Should they be forced to live in tents of trash for being born unlucky? Surely, we can do better.
neth jones Aug 2020
we gandered for food
they pepper sprayed sleeping bags
threat of the homeless ?
intolerable welfare ;
preyed on by authority

they garnish our sleep
projected from our cycle
and the battle we keep
fought lonely in dreams
our belly ache

this distended menace
our unsheltered numbers
threaten a stubborn structure
   ....it could seem
Francie Lynch Sep 2020
I was tricked into believing
This is my world.
There are too many signs
That can't be ignored.
It's certainly not my old world.
No, not my world at all.
Not the one I inherited,
And not the world I'll leave you.
And I'm so sorry for the mess we're in.
I'm sorry I'm made of carbon,
I'm changing,
I could be a diamond still.
Tip of the hat to the Wicked Witch of the West for the title.
Justine Louisy Jun 2020
My shadows are out there fighting.
The click of my fingers are shouting not
humming at every beat.
The hairs on my head shedding their
curly laughter.
My vision is chasing the intruding floaters.
My throat is frying pins and needles for my supper.
There are eroded rocks in my mouth.

My breath the stench of life.

I hope you smell it as you walk past.


Justine Louisy

Copyright © Justine Louisy 2017
All Rights Reserved
TOD HOWARD HAWKS Jun 2020
Have you ever been homeless?

Have you ever taken a cardboard box and flattened it, then place it on the the cold concrete of a sidewalk, then lie down on it and hope you wake up tomorrow?

Have you ever encountered homeless people? Have you ever talked to them, spent time in their company?

I have.

In Houston, TX in 1992. On Prescott Street in downtown Houston. A veritable sea of black men who called this two-block stretch their home.

I got out of my white rental car and started to walk across Prescott Street where I saw a congregation of black men standing. As I began to cross the boulevard, one black man began to hurl verbally vile epithets at me like a machine gun would incessantly fire bullets. I kept walking. The man keep verbally attacking me. For some reason, these bullets of hate did not threaten me. They seemed to **** by my head without doing any harm. I walked right in front of this understandably tormented soul until I reached the congregation of men.

In this group of men, I found “Rambo,” who, I was told, was the de facto sheriff of this community. I introduced myself to him, using my real name as I always do. Rambo was a giant of a man. When I shook his hand, his hand enveloped mine; it was twice as big as mine. Rambo was so big and strong, he could have, with one arm, swung me easily two blocks in the air. I told him I was both a poet and a human-rights advocate, and I was taking a year out of my life to tour America and see for myself the gross reality of homelessness, hunger, and hopelessness that pervaded our country, and then to speak out about the pain of our people.

While I was speaking with Rambo, the man who had continuously cursed at me as I had walked across the boulevard was still cursing at me, until Rambo looked at him and said in a stentorian voice, “Don’t you realize what this man is trying to do?” The man who had been constantly cursing at me immediately stopped.

I spent the next two hours walking down two blocks, crossing the boulevard, then walking two more blocks to reach my car, all the while stopping to speak to those homeless men who wanted to talk to me, but never bothering anyone who I could tell didn’t want to.

When I reached my car, I opened the car door and started to get in when I saw the man across the boulevard who had greeted me two hours earlier with an unending stream of swear words. Our eyes met. Then that man waved his arm at me. I waved back. Then I heard him yell to me “God bless you.” I yelled back “God bless you.” Obviously, I have never forgotten those two hours. They remain one of the highest points of my life.

So you have asked me “What part of homelessness appeals to people?”

I believe you need to take your own walk through homelessness, endure the initial vitriol, introduce yourself, shake hands perhaps, talk with the human beings who live homelessness, and maybe, in the end, be blessed, as I was, to hear a man who had originally been filled with rage yell to you “God bless you.”

Copyright 2020 Tod Howard Hawks
A graduate of Andover and Columbia College, Columbia University, Tod Howard Hawks has been a poet and human-rights advocate his entire adult life.
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