Empower Homeless People to Get Off the Street
Three Big Steps – LOTS of Baby Steps
What does it mean to “take responsibility”? Is this just an overused cliché?
Or, is it possibly the single greatest skill a person can be empowered with – the secret to a life of joy, success, and productivity?
The problem is – taking responsibility is hard. And not just for homeless people.
But the longer a person lives without a home, they more they get used to being ignored and given free stuff by well-meaning strangers. Left on their own, the idea of being “responsible” is so far outside their everyday life that it has no meaning.
Babysteps works to empower homeless people –
one small step at a time – and builds within them the confidence to take ownership of their lives.
Read a true story of a man who escaped the streets
So – what might “responsibility” look like for someone who’s been on the streets for 15 years? Hardened. Discouraged. Dependent on substances. Alone.
It will look different for every single person.
That’s why Babysteps doesn’t use a one-size-fits-all approach. We do use a program called Holistic Hardware as a basic guide for our work, but at its core Babysteps is about relationships.
Big Step 1: Relate
Our first step is to go out and meet people.
We spend time with them. Lots of time. Every Saturday, a group of committed volunteers (like you! Click to learn how) gives their time to people living on the streets of Seattle. We get to know them. We don’t try to convince them to go to this shelter, or enter that program, or stop drinking, or try to get a job.
The secret to empowering a homeless person is relational trust. And trust takes time.
Why is this so important? Because homeless people are so used to what you saw earlier: Being ignored, given free stuff, and told what to do. None of these have any positive long-term effects.
When you focus on relating to them where they are, you sidestep all that.
Big Step 2: Empower
This is where responsibility takes root.
As you become friends with a homeless person, you discover what they want and desire. What frustrates them, and why they lose hope. Their unfulfilled and broken dreams.
And because you’ve built trust, you can begin to lead them to take steps to change their lives.