On behalf of Tent City 3, thank you. Youāve all been respectful and courteous, and have welcomed us with open arms. Weāve taken away and learned from this experience as much as yāall have. ā Chad
What does it mean to be homeless? For many residents of Tent City 3 (TC3) during its 90-day stay on campus as part of the Universityās mission to teach, learn and serve in innovative ways, being homeless had historically meant being misunderstood.
āThere are a lot of assumptions that homelessness is a direct result of something the homeless person has done wrong, but thatās just not true,ā says Donna, who moved to TC3 with her husband, Chad, after a job fell through. She poses a challenge: If you have an idea of what homelessness looks like, stop and think. Is your idea based in reality?
For three months, members of the 91±¬ĮĻ community challenged their own assumptions as they connected with TC3 residents through courses, clinics, service days, meal sharing and by simply being good neighbors.
As they neared the end of their campus stay, TC3 residents reflected on the experience.
āMamaā TerriDee
You have a job. You get fired. Your first paycheck after that, there goes your rent and your car payment. The second check is most likely your insurance and your childcare. The third check you donāt get. So where are you going to go? Straight to the streets. Thatās how close you are from having a job to where we are right now. Itās not laziness. Living on the streets is hard. I wouldnāt wish being homeless on my worst enemy.
Donna
We were in Denver, working. My husband was on a construction job with a man who came up to Seattle, got settled into another construction site, called us and said, āIāve got a job for you, and yāall can stay with me.ā So we packed our bags and bought our bus tickets. Then we got the call. He wasnāt here, the job wasnāt here, the place wasnāt here. So we started scrambling on the bus. After an initial breakdown, I started Googling homeless shelters. TC3 was the first one that popped up and the first one I called. Weāve been here ever since, and itās been a blessing. Every time students come here and do things for us, whether theyāre bringing food or playing music, as soon as they step into TC3, you can just feel the āWhat can we do?ā attitude. The compassion. The actual caring. In just a few weeks, Iāve grown attached to all the students whoāve been in and out of here.
Justin
I really like being on campus. Itās good community, good people, and everybodyās been really generous with donations. Students will bring in dinner, serve it and eat with us as we sit together and talk. Itās pretty cool because everybodyās interested in what homelessness actually is. Students will come all the way out here in this weather and want to hear our stories so they can help other people realize how homelessness actually works and what the people who are in it are actually like.
Chad
Iāve learned from the students that there are still good people in this world. In the short time weāve been homeless, weāve been blessed enough to be on this campus. Weāve encountered nothing but open arms, generosity and people who are willing to listen and talk to us ā people who ask us how our days are. Outside of the University, at regular camps and shelters, we donāt get that. We get looked at. We get treated differently. Everybody here has been fabulous. And I like it because itās educating: Itās educating us, itās educating the students, and the students are educating others. The students get to see the aspects of homelessness, the different people, the different reasons. And then they turn around and do papers, presentations and so forth that reach more people. Itās a revolving, pay-it-forward kind of deal. Thatās why I like it.
Justin
People think that all homeless people are either addicts or mentally ill. Some of them are, but the percentage isnāt as high as people think. I became homeless because I was having medical problems in California, where Iām from. My doctor said, āYou need to leave your environment. You need to leave this town.ā Where Iām from, itās extremely hot and thereās a lot of pollution. I was having issues breathing, so I sold everything I had and moved up here, just when things started getting expensive. I canāt afford to live here anymore.
Ivan
I think we gave the students some good insight into the emotional toll that being homeless takes on you. Itās not easy living out here, but the interaction with the students ā nursing, medical, dental ā itās humanized us instead of dehumanized us. And thatās the big thing, because weāre all human. We all have feelings. We all have wants and needs, and the outpouring of support from this campus has been awesome. I really didnāt expect it, but itās been quite refreshing. I really enjoyed my time here.
Jonathan
Iāve never been to school or anything like that, but ever since I came to Seattle and ended up in this place, Iāve thought about getting an education. I could leave here with a degree. Maybe fisheries or nursing, or maybe I could take an aptitude test and see what Iām good at. My experience here has been awesome and totally inspiring. Education suddenly seems pretty important. Iād probably be a lot happier if I tried to use my brain instead
of my muscle.
For more on Tent City 3ās stay at the 91±¬ĮĻ, including the classes that formed connections with TC3 residents, visit .
