Yesterday I had a different vision for our cottage. One of my friends asked on Facebook if we knew any South Florida resources for a trans teen kicked out of her home. She's got friends to stay with right now, but that situation can't be permanent.
Before I go any further, let me mention Project Safe, which has many more resources for South Florida than I do.
I am aware that I have a tendency to want to rescue people, so I want to proceed cautiously. Taking in a homeless Florida teen seems to come with lots of possible legal ramifications, so again, I want to be cautious.
I thought back to a night in 1994 when I watched the episode of My So-Called Life when gay teenage student Ricky is kicked out of his home for being gay. He's been beaten up, and the audience assumes that it's his family who beat him up before they kicked him out.
I remember watching that episode and weeping and wondering what the larger community could do. I remember understanding why Angela's parents are reluctant to help.
This morning I also thought of That 70's Show, which has a different troubled teen who finds himself homeless. That situation is more comic, but it's still depicted with sensitivity and the awareness of a deeper issue. In that show, the homeless teen Steven moves into the basement of his friend Eric, who has an intact nuclear family. It's not a great bedroom, but it's better than his other options.
When we've thought of the cottage, we've thought of the temporary shelter program that our church participates in, where homeless families who are in the process of getting permanent housing stay in a church for a week. We've wondered if we could be a shelter. But we're not a great location for families with children: our cottage is small, and we have a pool that doesn't have the proper protections to keep children inside the fence from drowning.
I've thought of giving shelter to refugees, maybe even working with the Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services group. There, too, we might not be the best option, although the rustic nature of the cottage might not be a dealbreaker for refugees.
I've thought of providing Section 8 housing, but there are long-term implications and agreements that make me uncomfortable. I've wondered if there's another way to find people who would be good renters of property for people of low to moderate income levels.
Until last night, I hadn't thought of other groups of people who might need housing resources. Teens who have been kicked out of their houses for their sexual status: hmm. Let me think on this further.
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