About This Site

A comprehensive site outlining the causes, management and solutions to the homeless mentally ill.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Returning after a long hiatus

It has been some time, years, since I last posted. I had planned to make a comprehensive study of the problem of the homeless mentally ill in one of the world's wealthiest cities. I believe I have accomplished that and from some of the comments that have come my way, I believe the task was very worthwhile. Many have written that this blog has helped them in times of trouble. Lord knows, we have all been through times of trouble and if anything I have done has helped, then it was worthwhile.

I had stopped posting because I went to work at the Calgary Drop-In Centre -- probably the world's largest homeless shelter. It is an amazing place with amazing people. The staff who work there are beyond description as far as the best attributes that can be found in human beings goes. There can be up to 1500 homeless people per night staying there. There are five floors. No one is turned away except for the extremely violent who would be a danger to the staff and other clients. Other than that, no one is turned away. Ever.

I worked nights. Mostly I worked on the first floor, at the entrance door and in the extreme intoxication ward. Sometimes I worked in the lobby where those in extreme intoxication had been removed to. It was like a war zone where wounded and desperate people lay everywhere. I have never seen such a sight other than in pictures of refugee camps or places recovering from natural disaster. In spite of the devastation, there is the consistent manifestation of unbelievable kindness and generosity between clients and among staff. It is a truly remarkable place. It changed me.

I also worked on other floors where people could try to get their lives together. Some of the floors had clients who worked daily and were waiting to get a place or established. These were sober floors. There are programs and counselling services. There is an artists' studio. There is an extensive kitchen and food. The place was built by the people of Calgary, primarily, who raised the money for it. It continues to run as a charity. It is right downtown and in a beautiful building. The place has saved a lot of lives. However, sometimes we lose people whose bodies have been found in the adjacent river or frozen in a parking lot nearby. Sometimes we are told of someone in trouble and we go and get them and bring them into the warmth. It was winter then and people freeze to death in Calgary.

At first I thought there would be a tremendous number of crack addicts. However, there were incredibly few crack addicts. Many had problems with alcohol. Some just had a really bad turn or series of turns in their luck. Practically every single client had been through the child protection agency or had been a foster child.  No one had family other than other people on the street. The lack of family, as children and as part of growing up, was the most remarkable and outstanding statistic. It appears there is a tie between us and our birth parents, that if broken has devastating results. The power of the family is absolute in our lives. After being at the DI for four months that winter, that is an obvious statistic.

There are those who man the trenches: men and women actually. Their weapon is selflessness. The battle cannot be won, but it must be fought. The resolution to this overwhelming injustice is included in teachings of many admired teachers and leaders in the past. It is our materialism that is killing us. But how do we change that? Indeed, how do we change?

Friday, January 9, 2009

Integrity

According to mathematical calculations, our model of society establishes that the reason we have such horrific social problems, like homelessness and a growing army of mentally ill without access to medical care, comes from basic corruption in society.


Let me explain. It's an engineering problem. Take a bridge. What keeps a bridge up? How come it doesn't fall? Simple. It is the structural integrity of the bridge and integrity of the materials making up the bridge that keep it from falling. If the bridge has no integrity, then the bridge will fall. Simple.

Society is made up of relationships between people -- not political, or social, or financial, or religious or psychological or whatever kind of relationship, but a complex set of dynamics and experiences that form relationships. Not relationships with institutions or companies or governments, but relationships between people, pure and simple.

So, if society is made up of relationships between people and those relationships lack integrity, then society collapses, just like a bridge or a building or anything else. We have found that truth and a commitment to truth and reality is the key to solving social problems. If you want to cure a disease, you have to find the cause of it. Otherwise you are just treating the symptoms. If you want to cure a disease; find the cause. Then you can cure the disease.

The political system and inherent philosophy is irrelevant. The amount of money, budget and technology are all irrelevant. You don't even have to go large scale. If the day-to-day interactions and subsequent relationships between people in a society lack integrity, you will have problems all over the place.

The present economic collapse is no exception. It collapsed because our economic system lacks integrity. Any further analysis is just details.

Our health and social systems lack integrity. Just ask anyone working in these systems. Ask a doctor or an experienced social worker. You can even ask a politician. I've talked to a number of them and, so far, they all agree.

The system under which we live is designed to lack integrity. If you fix it up and make it all squeaky clean, it will soon deteriorate. It works with the assumption that people are fundamentally greedy and lazy, that people themselves lack integrity and have even been trained to be that way. It's an incorrect assumption. If it was correct there would be no need for the media and educational promotion of a necessity of acquiring unlimited material wealth for the sake of self indulgence. You gotta train people to lack integrity and keep at it to make a society like the one we have now.

Everything is relationship. Everything is people -- people dealing with people. The fault lies not with any organization, government, whatever. The fault lies with the individuals that make up and work for organizations, governments, whatever.  That's you and me, and in how we deal with others. It is a personal commitment to integrity.

It's called being an adult. Society has to grow up. A commitment to selfish motivations will result in poverty and disease. An immoral society is a diseased society, or soon will be. 

The cure? Easy. Work together. Talk about it. In a depression, people become a heck of a lot more valuable than money. They're printing the stuff like crazy and it won't be worth much very soon anyway. People, on the other hand, now that's a different story.