Post #6 -- Scroll down for previous posts.
Over spring break this past March, I went on an Alternative Spring Break trip to Washington, D.C. to learn more about homelessness. Eleven other students and I participated in the Homeless Challenge (Urban Plunge) through the National Coalition for the Homeless in order to experience homelessness first hand. This is my story.
At last, it was time for sleep. Sitting on my sleeping bag, I began to take off my gym shoes, finally freeing my sore feet from their Adidas prison. I had just gotten the right one off and peeled back my rain soaked sock, when Steve turned to me and told me I had better put it back on. On the street, you sleep with your shoes on, inside of your sleeping bag. There are two reasons -- it prevents others from stealing your shoes and it allows for a quick departure if need be. So grudgingly I squished my foot back into the shoe and tucked myself into my Coleman Mummy.
I laid there and everything began to sink in. I was actually sleeping on the street. It was something that I had been looking forward to for months and I was finally doing it. The crisp breeze whipped at my face, because although we were under an awning, there was nothing to break the wind. I wrapped my scarf around my head, while simultaneously trying to make it my pillow, but it was itchy and uncomfortable. In fact, there wasn’t much comfortable about sleeping on the ground. The cardboard beneath my body offered little cushion for my bones; my ribs and hips fought a losing battle against the concrete. And after a full day of walking and moving, it seemed that when finally given their chance, my legs had no idea whatsoever of how to relax.
After much tossing, turning, and rustling of my sleeping bag, I settled into a position...not necessarily because it was comfortable -- but more because I realized finding a comfortable position would be impossible, so I just admitted defeat.
I closed my eyes. The symphony of the night began its hum. The whoosh of a passing bus offered up the opening chords. Steve, despite his promise of staying awake, had already settled into a deep sleep and his steady snore filled the alcove. Distant car horns added some percussion, and the melody swelled with the sirens of a speeding ambulance. As the night’s music washed over me, my thoughts wandered through both the lands of logic and nonsense. What if a police officer yelled at us to move? Would I ever be able to fall asleep? What if a stray bullet somehow barreled its way through my leg? (I did warn you some thoughts were nonsense).
Suddenly, my mind slammed on the brakes and I was jolted wide awake. A man’s voice, full of rage, permeated the air. “DON’T YOU MOVE YO ASS. DON’T YOU MOVE YO ASS!” Less than half a block away, it seemed as if all hell was about to break loose. Over and over again I heard the expletives and threats of a man looking for a street corner brawl. I was tense and I was afraid. What if they got close to us? Would my idiotic thought of a becoming GSW victim become a reality? I concentrated on the angry yells, trying to judge exactly how far away they were and if that distance was changing, afraid to even lift my head up to see for myself. No sleeping bags rustled on either side of me, so I concluded that I was the only one awake. For fifteen minutes the screaming continued, and for fifteen minutes I was consumed by fear.
At last, the yelling quieted and the street resumed its busy yet comforting song. I don’t know how I was able to drift off, but I did. Though every 30 minutes, I woke up, realized that, yes, I was sleeping on the street a few blocks down from the White House, and then went back to sleep. Before I knew it, Steve’s voice was telling us it was time to wake up. It was 5:45 a.m. and I felt like I had slept for maybe three minutes. To our delight (sarcasm), Steve snapped a picture of us just as we had opened our tired eyes -- for his scrapbook :) Immediately, I was in a fully conscious state and sat up without hesitation. After taking about a minute to roll up my sleeping bag and gather my belongings, we were already on our way. While we grabbed our cardboard to throw away and set off towards a McDonald's a few blocks away, I glanced back to the awning. It was if we had never been there.
While we walked we all talked about how it had been to sleep on the street. To my surprise, my three fellow participants were just as wide awake as I had been when the man on the street corner had began his rant. And all three of us had each thought that they were the only person awake! As we were talking about the incident, Steve revealed to us what had actually happened. It may have seemed like a few guys were about to get into a fight -- in reality it was just one mentally ill homeless man screaming at the stationary light post.









