Kenney Morales Prof Peters English-101 “Homelessness” Imagine you are walking in a city, and amongst the crowded street, you notice a man. He isn’t walking, just sitting down out of sight. He doesn’t make a sound. However, he stands out the most out of everyone else. As you pass you see a cardboard sign with the writing asking for money in the corner of your eye. In addition, to his unpleasant smell, long beard, and messy hair it seems he is invisible. So many people pass by him still they walk on with their day as if nothing even happened. They just look at him with either pity or disgust, and even both. Often times, people experience things in their life that often force them to lose everything and live out on the streets, or many times it is by choice that they live on the streets. Frequently, we just pass by people and look down on them since they have no home; but who is to say they don’t have a home? Home is not the house you live in or the country you belong to. It is a place that incites certain feelings and those feeling are what makes a place home. The people on the streets with no “home” may simply find that anywhere in the world is where they call home. Home has two specific set of values that make it more than just a place which are privacy, and safety. The first value that makes home feel like a home is a sense of privacy. People need to feel that they don’t have to worry about someone constantly being in their personal space it incites a feeling of
The definition of 'home' is different for many people. Some people have no place to call home. To some, home is the place where family is at. To others, home is a state of mind, something completely resting on the beliefs or thoughts of the individual. The general idea of home is a place of safety and stability.
Home can be a person, a place, or a space with nothing at all. Home is the place or the headspace where you feel the most comfortable, where you are cut off from the thing dragging you down, the space where you feel the most comfortable, but a place where one is enthusiastic about living life. The idea of being surrounded by nothing and still feeling the most fulfilled, finding home in nothingness is explored in the book “Into The Wild” by Jon Krakauer. A book which
Even though the majority of people that fills up this park are part of the upper-medium social class, there are homeless people walking around the area. While I was doing my observations, I saw a homeless man walking in front a restaurant that looked expensive. The homeless man sat down outside the door of the restaurant and waited for people to walk by to ask for money, he made a huge contrast in the environment. There were people in their business clothing walking by, some of them were on their phones while others were just trying to get to their
Home is a sacred place where one feels comfortable in. As Sonsyrea Tate states, “You can leave home all you want, but home will never leave you,” it suggests that home may be conceived as of a dwelling, a place, or a state of comfort. There are many memories in a home and when one leaves home, there are many memories that are carried with him or her. In Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver, a family moves to Congo, South America for the sake of the father’s occupation, a minister. To adapt to this new place with different rules, the females of the family have to sacrifice.
Life can be boring, especially when you might have lived in a certain place for so long. However, to have a place to call home is the most comfort feeling anyone can have, even if they have been moving their whole lives. But home, does not always mean a physical place, but the bond shared with people in that place. In Scott Russell Sanders essay, Homeplace, he expresses how people staying is good because one can truly respect or feel blessed of what they have received than to throw away the effort that once existed. Yet, Richard Ford’s
Rather, home is somewhere that we can fully trust and agree morally, somewhere that promotes freedom, but most of all, somewhere that allows us to develop our characters and nurture
As he goes across the country, he realizes that the concept of home isn’t just limited to a specific location. Matter of fact, he claims that the concept of home is subjective, stating, “The very basic core of a man's living spirit is his passion for adventure. The joy of life comes from our encounters with new experiences, and hence there is no greater joy than to have an endlessly changing horizon, for each day to have a new and different sun” (Krakauer 57). This quote shows Chris’s look on home as an ever-changing concept that is not just limited to one specific location or set of experiences. For Chris home is wherever he finds adventure and discovery, whether it’s on a deserted beach in Mexico or even in the deep Alaskan wilderness.
Home is associated with family, which is another reason why it is so
One’s personal experience, changes their perception of home. Based on those experiences, there’s an evaluation of whether or not it’s considered home or it violated the notion of
Gordon Waitt and Andrew Gorman-Murray, "It's About Time You Came Out The article talks about how the understanding of home and the understanding of self can become an enigma for a person who is unable to conform to the social expectations of the society he lives in. A man who does not conform to who is regarded as a "normal guy" in a given society will find it difficult to live in comfortably in his home. A 16-year-old Australian man view of home is disoriented because he is unable to fit in the social formations of that society.
Through Garnet’s struggles and success of finding his real home, Richard Wagamese outlines the importance of people having a home.
In all fairness, I had those same ideas too. Many people have driven or walked past a group of homeless people and ignored them or gone out of their way to not make contact. It’s just part of our culture. Homeless people are shunned and looked down upon. Over time, the word homeless has taken on a very negative connotation, and those labels such as, criminal, lazy and addict have taken over our perception of who homeless people are.
Home is My Life Burden Home. An alternative life kept from the outside world. Behind closed doors, it can be filled with tension but others may see happiness. Life outside my home is my escape from the anxiety that’s built from within the walls of what is called my home. But now, it’s not fully a family with just me and my mother.
At the age of nine most kids are spending their time outside at the playground with their friends, when I was nine I got to experienced what is was being homeless. Growing up I never knew my home was dysfunctional because my mother did everything she could to shield me and my siblings from the reality of that was actually happening, until she couldn’t anymore. My father was in and out of jail and struggling with drugs and alcohol, till this day I don’t think my mom really knew I understood what that meant but it was hard not to even at such a young age. I knew exactly what was happening, I remember the sleepless nights of hearing my parents screaming and yelling back and forth, and the cops showing up to arrest my dad. One day my mom had enough and decided she wasn’t going to put our family though it anymore, so she packed out bags and we left.
The home is a sanctuary of love and peace. It is the place where one feels entrenched upon. We do not talk of a physical structure which holds the living room, garage, and bedroom; but rather, of home and its embodiment in entirety. We talk of people as a home or people who causes something to become home. Moreover are events, memories, and experiences which relate to a person’s most comfortable feelings.