What are the things a homeless person begets while putting up in some stranger’s shelter?
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Answer:
First, many homeless people do seek shelter. There are more people living in city shelters than there have ever been; over 60,000 on an average night and over 100,000 over the course of the year. And though there are still thousands of homeless men and women living on the streets and sleeping on the subways, it is fewer than in the past though still significant.
Every year BRC assists thousands to leave the subways and streets for more appropriate living situation. And every year thousands more become homeless.
As much as we succeed, there are many who decline our help, at least initially. Their reasons are several. Independence. Fear of the unknown. Concern for safety. Lack of confidence. Pride. These are not exhaustive, but they are representative of what many feel, who say "no" to shelter.
Living unsheltered isn't easy, but you're autonomous.
Shelters have structure and rules: curfews, schedules, no outside food, no alcohol, limited smoking breaks, and limits on visitors. This has a practical benefit; sensible from the perspective of maintaining health and safety.
But it limits the freedom that comes naturally with living unsheltered, or in your own home. Living in a shelter also means living among people you don't know, may not trust, or even fear.
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