Ideas for true stories
Gripping depressing ones:
Slavery
War
Someone who has made a difference to the world?
Video: 'I used to be a gay man - I was burnt alive and now I'm a beautiful woman'
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/real-life-stories/video-i-used-gay-man-3197551#ixzz2v7W1RDod
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http://www.cracked.com/article_20105_5-inspiring-true-stories-anyone-feeling-cynical-today.html
Teacher Stops School Shooter With a Hug
Homeless to hero
Once a homeless teen, Melbourne’s Kirstie Papanikolaou, now 36, defied the odds and turned her life around. Now happily married with two kids, she’s helping others off the streets
Stories about survival
http://www.rd.com/true-stories/survival/
Orphaned on the Ocean: The Unbelievable Story of Terry Jo Duperrault
A young girl alone on a raft. A mysterious yacht accident. A missing family. It's a strange and tragic tale.
http://www.rd.com/true-stories/survival/everyday-heroes-when-his-family-fell-overboard/
Everyday Heroes: When His Family Fell Overboard
With his family adrift in rough waters, John Riggs swam for help.
http://www.rd.com/true-stories/survival/the-sailor-and-the-whale-survival-at-sea/
The Sailor and the Whale: Survival at Sea
A 40-ton gray whale lunges onto the deck, and Max Young seems sunk. What follows is the fight of his life.
Jen says: woman who pretended to be a survivor of 9/11
Under-aged Girls Rescued From Brothel In Ibadan Nigeria (PHOTO).
http://amazingstoriesaroundtheworld.blogspot.co.uk
inspired by book 'The Other Hand'
Detectives from Anti-Human Trafficking section of the State Criminal Investigation Department, Oyo State Police Command stormed Sharp Corner Hotel, Orita Aperin, Ibadan on Wednesday February 26 and rescued four girls being used for prostitution, two of who were discovered to be under-aged. A couple, Mr Temitope and Mrs Helen Falusi, who were running the brothel, were arrested.
Briefing journalists on Friday at the police headquarters at Eleyele, Ibadan, the state Commissioner of Police, Mohammed Indabawa said that the command received information that the woman and her husband were bringing the young girls from Benin, Edo State to her brothel in Ibadan for prostitution.
Briefing journalists on Friday at the police headquarters at Eleyele, Ibadan, the state Commissioner of Police, Mohammed Indabawa said that the command received information that the woman and her husband were bringing the young girls from Benin, Edo State to her brothel in Ibadan for prostitution.
Homeless Stories
http://www.mungos.org/about/real_life_stories
Real life stories of homeless people
People can become homeless for many reasons. We would like to say thanks to the clients who have shared their experiences with us, and talked about their hopes for their recovery and the future
In 2011 our Oral History project Street Stories gathered the stories of 41 residents. Listen to some of their stories and watch a short video by clients who conducted the oral history interviews (please be aware - some of the interviews contain strong language).
I need to make myself aware of what I am going into with interviewing homeless people. It is a very hard-hitting and despressing topic and I need to know what I am doing. I also need to know what I am asking of people.
“Two years ago my life fell apart. I was homeless and on the streets, and the thing I learnt from it all is that it can happen to anybody. It didn’t happen to me overnight; it took me six months before I found myself sleeping rough. When you realise you are in trouble there are friends to help you, but there are only so many settees and floors you can sleep on.
http://www.homeless.org.au
Robert’s Story

People ask me if it was a shock to become homeless. I’d lost everything. I used to have my own place in south London, two part-time jobs, a steady life. I’d worked in the antiques trade for decades. Being honest, alcohol was a factor in me becoming homeless – and a lack of employment. No job means no money, no food and no roof over my head.
I came to St Mungo’s in December 2012; I was referred here by another homelessness charity in London. Immediately, I had somewhere to wash, to stay, the food was good and I was warm. But it was a cultural shock at first; I was in a hell of a state when I first arrived. I was very nervous around people, but they were here to look after me.
I recognise that I have a self-destruct button; I can get so down and defeatist about things. But the great thing about St Mungo’s is that when you’re fed and you’ve got a nice room you can start to rebuild your life – you get lots of encouragement here.
I spend my time getting involved in the Grow Your Own gardening project. It’s a scheme for St Mungo’s residents who are interested in horticulture but want to do something close to home. It’s been an absolute godsend; so far I’ve helped create a garden in one hostel and have plans to work on two others next year. My first ever job was working in a garden centre, and to this day I can still tell the difference between a Paul Scarlet Geranium and a King of Denmark.
Having worked in the antiques trade for so long, I have a very good eye for colour, shape and movement. I knew exactly how I wanted those flower beds to look. The big challenge has been getting other residents involved, they’re not confident about doing it sometimes, but when they see everything in bloom they want to sit outside and play dominoes and take part too.
The gardening has given me a focus I didn’t have before. I am rebuilding, I am growing. One of the things being at St Mungo’s has definitely taught me is to take each day as it comes, take it slowly. I find it difficult to think long term, partly because of my age – a lot of people who have slept rough are dead at my age – I’m 59 years old.
I remember when I moved to St Mungo’s that I used to get annoyed about people knocking on my door, but now I realise they were doing it to make sure I was all right. It seems such a small thing but it’s very important. Thank God for the staff here, they’re bloody marvellous.
I know my life will never be quite the same again; the five bedroom house and the Porsche 911 will never return. I have a photograph of the last antiques shop I ever had. My life was so different back then. But being in a safe and secure environment again is so important; and that’s what I have here. In the next 12 months I want to get stuck in to more gardening at St Mungo’s, and improving my own environment inside and out. I hope I can keep giving something back to people who’ve helped me so much.”
http://www.homeless.org.au
People who don't have shelter are houseless - not homeless! Homelessness has nothing to do with a lack of shelter.

Define Homeless: 'An inadequate experience of connectedness with family and or community,' (Dominic Mapstone). This fact is now recognized by Habitat, the United Nations Human Settlements Programme.
If the problem was a lack of shelters for the homeless why aren't all the homeless shelter always full? During winter they are more busy but more shelters won't solve the problem.
So often on the street I've seen people shake a set of keys with a big smile on their face saying 'I've got a place.' But often they end up spending most of their time on the streets anyway because they just don't know anyone else other than other homeless people and an empty room is very lonely.
Homelessness is about a lack of connectedness. Belonging somewhere is about belonging with other people. Like belonging to a family or local community.
The largest social demographic in first world countries that experiences homelessness are actually elderly people who are houseful. Quite often their spouse has died and their children live at a distance. They feel the same loneliness and abandonment as the person living on the street.
People in institutions including prisons or juvenile justice centres often feel the same loneliness or more accurately experience homelessness as the only people they have contact with other than the other 'homeless' inmates are people paid to be a part of their life. These people are the equivalent of people who work in soup kitchens or shelters on the streets.
Imagine that, only having contact with people who are paid to have contact with you! This is chronic homelessness.
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http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13374361-being-and-homelessness
Being and Homelessness: Notes from an Underground Artist
by John H. Sibley (Goodreads Author)
4.38 of 5 staJohn Sibley was a homeless artist living in winter on the streets of Chicago for six months. The terrain is Chicago's Loop, Near Westside and the now abolished Maxwell Street open-air-market between 1989 and 2005. His aim in these philosophical essays is to shed light on a growing global problem. "Being and Homelessness" is not as much concerned with the cause but the wretched anxiety and pain of being homeless, which forces one to live, to exist in an in-authentic mode of "being-in-the-world." Sibley uses an existential lens to focus on this ghastly problem because the homeless being-in- itself is forged in rootlessness, displacement, and their lives are governed by the existential D's of death, dread and despair. After his dark night of the spirit Sibley believes that being homeless in the world, displaced and rootless, is one of the most terrifying challenges that a human can experience. "I gazed down into the underbelly of the abyss. I am blessed that I escaped the stygian darkness of the nether world of alleys, bridge viaducts, vacant cars and subways caverns. To escape that region of dread and despair teaches you that pain and suffering are central to the human condition," he writes. In these essays Sibley uses the term "being-in-the-world" as an experience that makes one acutely aware of that gap between consciousness and objects in the world. Being-in-the-world makes the homeless aware of a distance, an emptiness, a gap that separates them from the region of things. This essay is a plea to maximize this nation's resources, both public and private to help the wretched existence of the homeless. "I cannot recall the exact day-to-day or month-to-month suffering that I endured, but the existential feeling of dread, despair, hopelessness, wretchedness and loneliness still clings to my consciousness. "I write to illuminate the plight of the homeless so that when you see them in libraries, on subways, city busses, local train stations or standing in front of missions like they had stepped out of painter Edward Hopper's canvas, you won't judge them, as Anatole Broyard noted, as 'creatures of the darkness, where sex, drugs, gambling and other crimes are directed against a bourgeois culture that despises them.'" The homeless problems have become a Malthusian nightmare not just in Chicago but in urban cities across the nation and worldwide. The large population of homeless men, women and children give most urban cities a Third-World urbanscape. It would be disingenuous to state that the homeless only need shelter when the problem is much deeper than that. The Government needs to invest in creating a new Integrative Holistic Rehab Center [IHRC] to combat the multiple cause of homelessness. We need to heed the words of the homeless, Danish genius, Kierkegaard, who believed philosophy must recognize the presence of man-in-the-world. The reality is that for millions of us in our times we are only a lost job, a breadwinner's disability or death, a business failure, a lawsuit, a divorce, a long-term illness or natural disaster away from homelessness. Let the experience of John Sibley inspire you with its honesty, faith and redemption
sarahw@julianhouse.org.uk 2:00pm wednesday 26th march- meeting with Sarah to talk to her and also to clients at Julian House
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