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Being Homeless Has Allowed Me to Reinvent Myself

I've become used to not working like I became used to not being able to afford and wear perfume. When I told someone that I'd hit bottom, he responded, "Then the only way is up!" So I'm digging my way back. In one way homelessness has liberated me and reawakened me to what I most love doing. Since I don't have four walls of my own, a spouse or dependents, the world really is my oyster. Stripped of the old predictable life and strait jacket, it's on to the new creative way of living. As the saying goes, "No risk! No reward!"
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The author has requested we omit her last name to protect her privacy.

I sat in the lobby of Metro Hall one early winter morning. Having just been let out from the shelter where I slept, I had two hours to kill until the drop-in opened at 9:00 a.m. I was watching all the civil employees walking by. Some were waiting for the elevator to go up to their offices. I envied that they had a job to go to. I envied that they would probably retire with a good pension. Hell, I envied all the good benefits they have as civil employees.

Most importantly, I envied that they probably came from warm homes and slept in actual beds instead of on a mat in a church basement like I did. I even envied the banter they were having while waiting for the elevator.

It was never supposed to be this way for me! Poor, homeless and unemployed. As I wrote in my earlier blog, "My road to homelessness is a painful topic. It's simple math though: Prolonged unemployment + exhausted unemployment insurance + exhausted savings + an inability to get an apartment on welfare = my homelessness. I had quit my sales job for health reasons. I desperately looked for another job and even enrolled in the government's Second Career program. But nothing could help and I lost my apartment of 17 years in 2012."

With my education and years of work experience, I should be an accomplished professional moving up the ranks of a corporation (or so they tell you at university). I should have the luxury condo, the yearly luxury vacation and, of course, the retirement plan. Instead I'm dirt poor with no place of my own.

I'm single but should have been married with kids. I should be living in that big house I always wanted with the big dream kitchen -- you know the one featured on "Fresh Prince of Bel Air" -- to indulge my love of gourmet cooking and entertaining.

How will I ever catch up? My thoughts are constantly on getting out of poverty:

Here's my homeless bucket list:

1)Get off the streets -- CHECK (I recently got a room in a transitional home for the homeless.)

2)Sleep in a real bed -- CHECK

3)Shower everyday (a real luxury when you are homeless) -- CHECK

4)Change of undies everyday (another luxury) -- CHECK (Enough with the socks! Homeless women need undies...er, I mean, lingerie.)

5)Get my own place

6)Turn my passions of gourmet cooking, baking, etc. into a business or businesses (i.e. pop-up bakery & upscale vintage boutique? Personal chef?)

7)Get off welfare

8)Get a man! Too much loving has been stored up! Hmm...wonder if the new Old Spice hunk of burning love is available?

9)Have a real vacation. Provence is my dream. Maybe I'd finally use my degree in Communications & French (I've never had a job that relates to my degree)

10) Breathe

I can no longer see myself going back to corporate life, even though I'd love to have a job. (Do many "corporate lifers" truly like the life anyway?). I've become used to not working like I became used to not being able to afford and wear perfume. When I told someone that I'd hit bottom, he responded, "Then the only way is up!" So I'm digging my way back.

I'd love to use the phrase "bouncing back." But getting back to normalcy is not a sprint. It's a marathon! First you have to give "last rites" to your old life and related fantasies. The past is the past, though it can come knocking often, especially at 4:00 a.m. The sub-conscious is powerful, baby! (I collect and read children's books to put me back to sleep. The words and illustrations bring a smile to my face. Most of all, they always have a happy ending.)

I need to re-invent myself! The concept of multiple and creative streams of income comes to mind. I need to not think of "J-O-B," but ways to make an income based on my passions of Gourmet cooking, baking, writing, speaking, art etc. In one way homelessness has liberated me and reawakened me to what I most love doing. Since I don't have four walls of my own, a spouse or dependents, the world really is my oyster. Stripped of the old predictable life and strait jacket, it's on to the new creative way of living. As the saying goes, "No risk! No reward!"

Watch out world! There's a new Grace in town.

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Canada's Homeless
(01 of20)
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Michael Manitowabie 42, panhandles on his corner in downtown Toronto as he has done (according to him) for 20 years. (credit:David Cooper via Getty Images)
(02 of20)
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A homeless man walks outside the a subway station in Montreal on June 6, 2013. (credit:Luca Bruno/Associated Press)
(03 of20)
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Homeless Joe, as he likes to be called, poses for a photo in front of his handmade shelter under a GO train track in Toronto on May 17, 2012. (credit:Pawel Dwulit/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
(04 of20)
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A man sits bundled up in the cold on Yonge Street just north of Lakeshore Blvd. in Toronto. (credit:Tara Walton/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
(05 of20)
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Peter Prevost, center, wipes his tears as pastor Dorothy Lewis prays at Potter's Place Mission on West Hastings Street in Vancouver on Feb. 12, 2010. (credit:Jae C. Hong/AP)
(06 of20)
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Chris relaxes during breakfast time at the Toronto Friendship Centre. (credit:Bernard Weil/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
(07 of20)
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72-year-old Horace Prince stops in for a hot turkey lunch at the Scott Mission in Toronto on Dec. 25, 2012. The Mission has been serving hot Christmas meals for the needy and homeless since 1941. (credit:Randy Risling/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
(08 of20)
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Derek George is losing his on and off home in the Salvation Army's Hope Shelter in Toronto. George is among 124 homeless men who will be displaced. (credit:Colin McConnell/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
(09 of20)
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John Bowley stands outside of Osgoode Hall in Toronto where he often sleeps. Bowley is a homeless alcoholic and recovering heroin addict. (credit:Lucas Oleniuk/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
(10 of20)
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John Stephen Funke (right) carries his breakfast back to his seat at the Toronto Friendship Centre. After 40 years, the drop-in centre for the homeless is slated to lose city funding. (credit:Bernard Weil/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
(11 of20)
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Clifford Seymor enjoys a hot turkey lunch at The Scott Mission in Toronto. (credit:Randy Risling/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
(12 of20)
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Homeless Joe, as he likes to be called, sits on his bed in a handmade shelter under a GO train track where he lives in Toronto on May 17, 2012. (credit:Pawel Dwulit/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
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A woman wheels her cart along West Hastings Street in Vancouver on Feb. 12, 2010. (credit:Jae C. Hong/Associated Press)
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Donny is a homeless man who has thousands of dollars in provincial offences tickets that in some cases add up to tens of thousands of dollars. Mike is receiving help from the Fair Change Community Services legal clinic in Toronto. (credit:Carlos Osorio/Toronto Star via Getty Images))
(15 of20)
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Homeless people battle the first extreme cold weather alert of the season in downtown Toronto. (credit:Vince Talotta/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
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A homeless person sleeps in front of a Toronto store. (credit: Vince Talotta/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
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A homeless man in Toronto protects himself from the rain with plastic. (credit:Vince Talotta/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
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Street people nap on a Toronto street. (credit:David Cooper/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
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A homeless person sleeps near a steam grate on the corners of Victoria and Queen Street as Toronto braces for the first cold weather alert of 2012. (credit:Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
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An unidentified man helps Shawna, who only gave her first name, inject drugs in Vancouver on Feb. 12, 2010. (credit:Jae C. Hong/Associated Press)
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