I survived care, criminality and homelessness to become an award-winning journalist – but the system I endured makes such success stories vanishingly rare

When I zipped up my tent on my first night sleeping rough, I felt no despair. It was 2013 and I had picked a grassy patch near a bridle path, where I listened to the wind rustling through the trees as raindrops bounced off my nylon roof. I had always assumed something like this was going to happen to me. It had felt almost inevitable for years.

When viewed in isolation, my journey to the streets seems entirely of my own making. I had racked up considerable rent arrears, I was drinking heavily and I had left my flat without being evicted. I went to live in a tent and on random sofas for a few weeks, before moving into a charitable homeless hostel. Surely it was all my fault?

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘Natural noise’: disturbed by loud sex next door? Just imagine it’s birdsong

When a resident complained that her neighbour’s lovemaking kept her awake each…

‘I cooked it!’: meet the schools where pupils grow, pick and cook their own lunch

Chefs in Schools charity aims to intrigue, excite and thereby educate children…

Don’t put others at risk this Christmas if you have flu symptoms, UK health experts urge

As hospital admissions for the virus rise, doctors urge people who feel…

Public sector job losses could pass 100,000 if government refuses pay rises, says IFS

Chancellor must top up budgets or face industrial action and further recruitment…