THE HOBO
HANDBOOK: MEMOIRS OF A HOMELESS POET IN NEW YORK
By Daniel Canada c.2010
Before long the bills are stacking up. The rent or the mortgage becomes
overdue. You are robbing from Peter to
pay Paul. To add insult to injury, your unemployment insurance ran out, or you
were fired and never had any from the giddy-up. Suddenly the rug is pulled out
from underneath you and your next option is your first night out on the
streets. This is not exactly the scenario that I faced, but similar, in that I
was in transition between jobs and got caught out in the middle, when the
economy took a severe downturn.
Here's the deal on this situation, folks. Once you fall on your behind,
you’ll probably find your friends and family members viewing you as a social
pariah, and do their best to distance themselves from you, for fear of catching
the financial "heebie jeebies." There’s just no room for a free loader
in this day and age.
Now that the dye has been cast in the wool, you'll have to find
somewhere else to rest your head; a daunting proposition you would think. To
use my own circumstances as an illustration (especially since this is supposed
to be my memoir), there were priorities that have to be met immediately. For
one, I had to find a place to lay my head. I had to maintain a level of acceptable
cleanliness. Also, I had to find ways to keep up my precious sanity, which was being constantly
threatened by the gathering, depressing, storm clouds of abject poverty.
There was a lot on my plate at the time, especially during the first
few days. But I took courage and managed to meet these pressing goals. I was not
completely without resources. I used the tools and knowledge that I had before
being turned out into the concrete wilderness. What is more, I will demonstrate
to you how this was and can be done.
Hobo Handbook: Memoirs of a Homeless Poet in New York, will steer you
through these seemingly turbulent times, by revealing how I successfully negotiated
my way through the confusing maze of the jungle out there. To start off, I will
discuss some of the things that were closely associated with my personal survival
and shed a little light on the hither-to-unknown phenomenon of homelessness.
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