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Presenting views from staff, guests, and supporters of the Lincoln Park Community Shelter
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Taste of Fall tickets - now on sale!
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
"We believe in second chances. Come back."
He got sober. He found some stability in a healthy
relationship, and a good job at the M&M Mars company in the suburbs, where
he rose to line captain. He had a good run at a clean life for three years. But
when the relationship ended in 2007, he lost his footing. He relapsed, and
things quickly fell apart for William. He lost his job, moved in with his
cousin, and started using day and night.
Then, William was involved in a car wreck in which he nearly
lost his life. He did lose his van, and his driver’s license – a key link to
his livelihood. He was deeply shaken. In 2008, he checked into a shelter on the
north side – Lincoln Park Community Shelter – hearing that it was a good place
to go if you were out of work. But, he says, he wasn’t ready. The notion of a
curfew, and many rules and expectations, was too much. He stayed only a week.
William instead went to a drug rehabilitation program for
the next seven months, where he established a firm foundation of sobriety and reacquainted
himself with the routine and structure he needed to be accountable to himself
and others again. He relapsed a couple of times, but each time came back to the
program more determined to succeed and recommitted to change his life.
In 2010, he returned to Lincoln Park Community Shelter. “I’d
never been in a shelter with structure before. I’d only been in flophouses, on
the ‘tramp trail.’ Structure was a foreign concept to me.” He was amazed that
he was asked to set goals, attend classes, help with cleaning jobs around the
facility. He started out strong, had resolve to make it work. But three weeks
in, he came in to a few dollars, and found himself back in his old
neighborhood. “All bets are off after that first drink.”
He woke up the next morning on a porch in Englewood, knowing
he had missed curfew at LPCS, without a dime in his pocket, and felt ashamed at
having relapsed yet again. He thought he had burned yet another bridge at what
he now knew was his best chance out of his cycle of addiction for good.
But then two things happened to change the trajectory of the
story. First, a woman he had known all his life walked by and asked out of the
blue “William, do you want to use my phone?” He took the opportunity to call
Murray, his LPCS case manager. William was honest about what had happened.
Murray said, “William, we believe in second chances. Come back.”
Then, a man who happened to owe William money pulled up, and
gave him $5, which gave him the fare he needed to get on the CTA to get back to
the north side. “I didn’t resist, and I didn’t look back,” William says.
When William returned to LPCS, he and Murray worked out a
plan. We referred William to Healthcare Alternative Systems for intensive
outpatient treatment, which he completed. He also attended daily AA meetings,
got a sponsor, and diligently worked the 12 steps. He dove into computer
classes and employment readiness classes at Inspiration Corporation, and
eventually got his license back. He now has a driving job through Harborquest. Two
years ago, William moved into his own apartment in the Old Town neighborhood.
When William was homeless, he never smiled (partially because
he had no teeth). Now, he can’t stop smiling! “Housing means…self-respect,
dignity, maturity. I can thoroughly rest, eat what I choose, keep up my hygiene,
be safe, have clean clothes, and it takes away a lot of stress.”
His proximity to LPCS means that he can stay connected to
the support network he formed here, as a member of the Graduate Council and as
a mentor to others exiting homelessness. “I’m so grateful for the help I received at
LPCS, that now I’m giving back. Things didn’t change for me until I let my
guard down and asked for help.”
-- By Erin Ryan, Executive Director
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