Sunday, August 18, 2019
Women on The Street Essay -- essays research papers
 Women on the Street           Have you ever rushed down the street and felt that nagging feeling of  guilt, as you breeze by someone lying in a doorway? Is she alive? Is she ill?  Why do we all rush by without finding out is she's all right?       People sit in train stations, bus stations, parks, doorways,  unmistakably sick, with what, we don't know. All are seemingly alone. Some beg.  Some don't. Some have open sores that ooze and bleed. Some are drunk. Some  talk to themselves or formless others. They have no homes.       Street people make up a small percentage of the homeless population.  Most homeless people blend into the daily flow of urban life. Many families are  homeless. Many babies go from the hospital into the shelter system, never  knowing what it is like to go home. Women are another subgroup of the homeless.       Solutions to homelessness are not easily found. But before we can solve  problems, we must be sensitive enough that we create the will to find the  solutions. Often if we do not feel the problem, if some emotional response is  not made, we are not moved to seek solutions. We are often unmoved to even  recognize the questions. We cannot afford to keep walking by.       "Work is a fundamental condition of human existence," said Karl Marx. In  punch-the-clock and briefcase societies no less than in agricultural or hunting  and gathering societies, it is the organization of work that makes life in  communities possible. Individual life as well as social life is closely tied to  work. In wage labored societies, and perhaps in every other as well, much of an  individual's identity is tied to their job. For most people jobs are a  principal source of both independence and correctness to others. It should come  as no surprise that, in the work force or out, work and jobs are important in  the lives of homeless women.       There are women who want to work and do, and women who want to work and  do not. There are women who cannot work and others who should not work and  still others who do not want to work. Some work regularly, some intermittently;  some work part-time, some full-time; and there are even those who work two jobs.  At any given moment, there is a lot of job-searching, job losing, job changing,  and ...              ...es  could have contained the explosive forces of racial animosity, social class  differences, competition for resources, overcrowding, individuals who were not  always in control of their actions, and individuals who wanted to disassociate  themselves from the group. but came against these forces, and born mainly out  of shared homelessness and common needs, was a powerful impulse to group  cohesion and solidarity. Most of the time, the impulse to solidarity was strong  enough to hold the negative forces in check, there by providing the minimum of  peace and good order that made social life possible. On many evenings, as the  women came together in the shelter, there was sufficient good feeling and fellow  feelings, when coupled with their common needs and circumstances, to allow a  sense of community to sputter into life. For most women, the loneliness of  their homeless state was a terrible burden to bear; this fragile bit of  community, however small, was precious indeed.       "Homelessness is the sum total of our dreams, policies, intentions,  errors, omissions, cruelties, kindness, all of it recorded, in the flesh, in the  life of the streets." (Marin 41).                       
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