Becky Blanton: The year I was homeless

97,890 views ・ 2009-10-28

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
I'm a writer and a journalist,
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and I'm also an insanely curious person,
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so in 22 years as a journalist,
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00:23
I've learned how to do a lot of new things.
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00:25
And three years ago, one of the things I learned how to do
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00:28
was to become invisible.
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00:31
I became one of the working homeless.
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00:34
I quit my job as a newspaper editor
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00:36
after my father died in February of that same year,
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and decided to travel.
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00:43
His death hit me pretty hard.
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00:45
And there were a lot of things that I wanted to feel and deal with while I was doing that.
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00:49
I've camped my whole life. And I decided
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that living in a van for a year to do this
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00:53
would be like one long camping trip.
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00:55
So I packed my cat, my Rottweiler
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and my camping gear into a 1975 Chevy van,
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01:02
and drove off into the sunset,
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01:04
having fully failed to realize three critical things.
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01:08
One: that society equates
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living in a permanent structure, even a shack,
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with having value as a person.
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01:16
Two: I failed to realize how quickly
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01:19
the negative perceptions of other people
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can impact our reality, if we let it.
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01:24
Three: I failed to realize
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that homelessness is an attitude,
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01:28
not a lifestyle.
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01:31
At first, living in the van was great.
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01:33
I showered in campgrounds. I ate out regularly.
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01:36
And I had time to relax and to grieve.
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01:40
But then the anger and the depression about my father's death set in.
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01:44
My freelance job ended. And I had to get a full-time job
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to pay the bills.
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01:49
What had been a really mild spring
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turned into a miserably hot summer.
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01:53
And it became impossible to park anywhere --
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01:55
(Laughs)
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-- without being very obvious
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that I had a cat and a dog with me, and it was really hot.
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02:01
The cat came and went through an open window in the van.
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02:04
The doggy went into doggy day care.
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02:06
And I sweated.
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02:08
Whenever I could, I used
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employee showers in office buildings and truck stops.
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02:14
Or I washed up in public rest rooms.
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02:18
Nighttime temperatures in the van rarely dropped below 80 degrees Fahrenheit,
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02:21
making it difficult or impossible to sleep.
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02:24
Food rotted in the heat.
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02:27
Ice in my ice chest melted within hours,
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02:30
and it was pretty miserable.
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02:38
I couldn't afford to find an apartment,
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02:40
or couldn't afford an apartment that would allow me
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02:42
to have the Rottweiler and the cat.
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02:44
And I refused to give them up,
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02:46
so I stayed in the van.
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02:52
And when the heat made me too sick
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to walk the 50 feet to the public restroom
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outside my van at night,
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02:59
I used a bucket and a trash bag as a toilet.
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03:02
When winter weather set in, the temperatures dropped
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below freezing. And they stayed there.
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03:07
And I faced a whole new set of challenges.
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03:12
I parked a different place every night
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03:15
so I would avoid being noticed and hassled by the police.
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03:18
I didn't always succeed.
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03:20
But I felt out of control of my life.
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03:27
And I don't know when or how it happened,
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03:31
but the speed at which I went
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03:33
from being a talented writer and journalist
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03:36
to being a homeless woman, living in a van,
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03:39
took my breath away.
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03:41
I hadn't changed. My I.Q. hadn't dropped.
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03:44
My talent, my integrity, my values,
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03:50
everything about me remained the same.
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03:53
But I had changed somehow.
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03:55
I spiraled deeper and deeper into a depression.
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03:58
And eventually someone referred me to a homeless health clinic.
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04:01
And I went. I hadn't bathed in three days.
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04:04
I was as smelly and as depressed as anyone in line.
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04:08
I just wasn't drunk or high.
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04:11
And when several of the homeless men realized that,
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04:14
including a former university professor,
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04:16
they said, "You aren't homeless. Why are you really here?"
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04:20
Other homeless people didn't see me as homeless,
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04:22
but I did.
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04:25
Then the professor listened to my story and he said,
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"You have a job. You have hope.
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04:32
The real homeless don't have hope."
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04:36
A reaction to the medication the clinic gave me for my depression
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04:39
left me suicidal. And I remember thinking,
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04:41
"If I killed myself, no one would notice."
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04:52
A friend told me, shortly after that,
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04:57
that she had heard that Tim Russert,
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04:59
a nationally renowned journalist,
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05:01
had been talking about me on national T.V.
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05:03
An essay I'd written about my father,
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05:05
the year before he died, was in Tim's new book.
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05:09
And he was doing the talk show circuit. And he was talking about my writing.
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05:12
And when I realized that Tim Russert, former moderator of "Meet the Press,"
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05:16
was talking about my writing,
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05:18
while I was living in a van in a Wal-Mart parking lot,
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05:20
I started laughing.
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05:22
You should too.
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05:24
(Laughter)
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05:25
I started laughing
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05:27
because it got to the point where,
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05:29
was I a writer, or was I a homeless woman?
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05:32
So I went in the bookstore. And I found Tim's book.
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05:35
And I stood there. And I reread my essay.
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05:38
And I cried.
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05:40
Because I was a writer.
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05:43
I was a writer.
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05:45
Shortly after that I moved back to Tennessee.
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05:48
I alternated between living in a van and couch surfing with friends.
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05:51
And I started writing again.
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05:54
By the summer of the following year I was a working journalist.
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05:57
I was winning awards. I was living in my own apartment.
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06:00
I was no longer homeless.
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06:02
And I was no longer invisible.
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06:05
Thousands of people work full and part-time jobs,
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06:08
and live in their cars.
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06:10
But society continues to stigmatize and criminalize
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06:13
living in your vehicle or on the streets.
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06:16
So the homeless, the working homeless, primarily remain invisible.
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06:20
But if you ever meet one,
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06:22
engage them, encourage them, and offer them hope.
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06:26
The human spirit can overcome anything if it has hope.
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06:31
And I'm not here to be the poster girl for the homeless.
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06:33
I'm not here to encourage you to give money to the next panhandler you meet.
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06:36
But I am here to tell you that, based on my experience,
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06:39
people are not where they live,
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06:42
where they sleep,
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06:44
or what their life situation is at any given time.
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06:49
Three years ago I was living in a van
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06:52
in a Wal-Mart parking lot,
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06:54
and today I'm speaking at TED.
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06:57
Hope always, always finds a way. Thank you.
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07:02
(Applause)
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