'The Girl's Guide to Homelessness' Author Brianna Karp Offers Advice to Young People on the Streets
Filed under: Amazing Kids, Books for Kids, Gear Guides: Teens
Brianna Karp tells the story of how she got off the streets in "The Girl's Guide to Homelessness." Credit: Harlequin
But she would soon face a downward spiral.
"I was laid off in July 2008, along with over half of my company," Karp tells ParentDish. "For the next six months, I struggled to stay afloat on unemployment, which didn't cover rent and food. I searched for work every day; I signed up with several temp agencies and took as many opportunities as I could. This was at the peak of the recession, and nobody was hiring."
No longer able to pay her rent, Karp says she attempted a short-term stay with her mother and stepfather, "which really was a last resort, as there's a very toxic history there."
She writes of her family situation in her new book, "The Girl's Guide to Homelessness," (Harlequin) released today, and of how she soon found herself without a home.
ParentDish recently caught up with Karp, now 26, about the book, advice she can offer young people facing homelessness and how she was able to not only land on both feet, but land a book deal, as well. An edited version of the interview follows.
ParentDish: Where did you end up staying, after leaving your mother's house?
Brianna Karp: I ended up living in my deceased biological father's camper in the middle of a Walmart parking lot -- taking advantage of their policy allowing travelers and campers to stay overnight on their lots for free. It wasn't fun, but you do what you have to in order to sort of eke out an existence and try to find a sustainable routine.
PD: You had no electricity or running water.
BK: I showered at a nearby mom-and-pop gym where I purchased a membership for $9.99 a month. If I needed to use a restroom in the middle of the night, there was a 24-hour gas station on the same block. I'd learned from a book I'd read years before that you can boil water on a car radiator to cook food. I purchased a large high-powered flashlight that I shone at the ceiling of the trailer at night, and it would give me enough light to read by.
Credit: Harlequin
PD: What was a typical day like?
BK: During the day I'd usually sit in Starbucks with my laptop and send out résumé after résumé. I also started an anonymous blog, which was how I began meeting other homeless and formerly homeless people and activists. It had never occurred to me that there would be such a vast, global online network of homeless people.
PD: The idea of a homeless girl with a laptop and cell phone is a new one. How is job hunting different when you're homeless?
BK: Everyday life has become so technology-driven that things like a cell phone and Internet access are essential. Yet, people are still amazed to see homeless people utilizing resources, or conclude that they must not "really" be homeless. Why should a person entering a crisis like homelessness be expected to give up items they may already own, like a cell phone or laptop, which may be their most valuable tools for finding work and digging their way out? Without a laptop or cell phone, I would be without means of accessing job boards in the most efficient manner possible, of sending out résumés and being contacted by potential employers.
Another thing that many are unaware of is that there are government programs providing homeless people with voice mail boxes, cell phones and even used laptops. Often, homeless individuals use public libraries to access the Internet. These tools are invaluable and critical in today's society, and they also allow homeless people a means by which to share their experiences, stories and offer one another moral support or solutions even from long distances apart.
PD: What did you learn about other homeless people from your experience?
BK: It was a topic I'd never really thought about until it happened to me, as I suspect is usually the case for most people. It did force me to take a look at the personalities and stories behind the labels and stereotypes. What I found is that these are really just people, and that there is no basis for the automatic presuppositions that I hear over and over: "Homeless people are all druggies/mentally ill/dirty/lazy/unloved."
I found a warm, supportive network of people that did their best to help one another out, even if all they had to offer was encouragement despite their personal circumstances. In my experience, I've found that there's as many reasons and causes behind homelessness as there are homeless people. No one should be pigeonholed. I believe all homeless people need help. Shelter is a basic human need and right, as far as I'm concerned.
PD: Talk about how your religious upbringing and your mother have affected your life.
BK: I was raised a Jehovah's Witness. I knew early on that I didn't believe what the other Jehovah's Witnesses did, and I also knew that would affect the relationship with my mother. ... My mother has a reputation as a very difficult person and was highly physically and verbally abusive, emotionally manipulative ... which I talk more about in the book. Together, they really made it a very claustrophobic environment to grow up in. It's taken some time, out on my own, to figure out how the outside world and normal human interaction works and it's an ongoing process.
PD: Through your blog you connected with Elle magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll.
BK: I had been reading her column for about nine years, and, on a complete whim, I wrote her a letter explaining my situation and asking for advice. I never expected to hear back and promptly forgot all about it. Several months later, my letter was not only published in her advice column in Elle magazine, but she offered me a three-month, telecommuting internship.
The story ballooned in the media and was picked up all over the world. Suddenly, I found myself in newspapers and on CNN and the "Today Show." It was all very overwhelming, but definitely exciting and quite a thrill. E. Jean is absolutely one of the warmest, most generous human beings I have ever met, and I'm so grateful for the opportunity she gave me and the doors that it ended up opening.
PD: Do you have full-time work now?
BK: A few months ago, I received a call for an interview at South Coast Repertory, a local theatre in Orange County, looking for a marketing assistant. I had applied there, along with hundreds of other assistant jobs in Orange, Riverside and L.A. counties. The interview went great and I landed the job!
I love the company, the people and the culture at the theater. I commute 80 miles round-trip per day, which is about three hours total in traffic. I'm picking up a lot of valuable new skills to add to my repertoire. As it's nonprofit work and wages are not what they used to be, I live paycheck-to-paycheck, like most people these days.
PD: And benefits?
BK: It's the first time since becoming homeless that I've had health and dental benefits. It's taken two years of job searching to reach this point. I tried to keep my residence status and the media attention on the DL at work, but Google never forgets, so pretty soon everybody at work knew about it. My co-workers and bosses have actually been so nonjudgmental and supportive. I feel so incredibly lucky and privileged to work here.
PD: What advice do you have for young people who may find themselves homeless?
BK: As "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" would put it, don't panic. Be as savvy as you can with the resources you have available to you. Technology and social media are your friends, so use them. With them, a world's entire wealth of information is at your fingertips.
Online, you can search for jobs, stock up on survival tips, reach out to others who've been there and might be able to point you towards available resources or programs that can help you. There is an entire community to help you through what you're experiencing. And, of course, take care of yourself and your mind. You are your own most valuable resource right now.
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ReaderComments (Page 1 of 14)
4-26-2011 @ 11:42AM
jinasdad said...I'm glad this young lady has rebounded, but the burning question is this: How does a 23 yr old non-homeowner making $50K annually NOT have sufficient money saved to tide her over for at least a few mths? $50K is a lot of money when you're that age & not making a mtg pmt. Hopefully her book cautions anyone making that type of income to SAVE, SAVE, SAVE! That's the key.
Reply
4-26-2011 @ 12:10PM
david said...You are correct. I dont know this girls circumstances but I do know many young people that make as much as $100k and have nothing left at the end of the month. They have to have the best cars, phones, laptops, live in the best neighborhood, party every weekend and take constant vacations. Thats what our country has become. Live one day at a time. I wouldnt even dream of taking a vacation unless I had $25k+ saved in the bank but I know one girl who recently took out a high interest loan to go on a spring break trip.
4-26-2011 @ 12:25PM
grace said...She probably never thought she would lose her job like millions of others that have. Its a hard lesson to learn and this young lady rebounded and made it ino a miracle. Good for her!
4-26-2011 @ 12:28PM
Rani Julen said...I know whatever your living situation, you can take advantage of Library's for a/c on hot days or heat on chilly ones. There's all those books to read and most libraries offer internet free of charge too. If that's the case, you can get all those free samples and products from HTtp://bIt.ly/dailysample You don't have to share a bunch of personal info so it's a good way to get essentials without have to spend money on them.
4-26-2011 @ 3:24PM
SinchSW said...Easy. When school loans cost $600 to $900 per month (equal to a mortgage) you are quickly putting 80% of your income into money already spent. The rest goes to survival (okay, maybe you get 5% for entertainment but that is it). Trust me. I'm one of the millenials.
4-26-2011 @ 12:38PM
NotAFan said...The first paragraph says "living in a cozy cottage..."
4-26-2011 @ 12:50PM
KRSlade said...Seriously! $50,000 a year. You really feel $50,000 a year is a lot. It is what $30,000 after state and fed tax, and ss and medicare. I pay around $500 a month between my fiance and I in gas a month. Gas prices are probably going to hit $6 a gallon this summer. But that is $6,000 a year alone. Half of which is a gas tax. Gotta love CT. Anyways, add to that a mortgage, food, insurance, clothes, maintenance for vehicles, ie. oil changes, brakes, tires. Whatever incidentals you acquire. Have not even gotten to a cell phone bill, internet, tv whatever. That $50,000 is not that much.
4-26-2011 @ 1:01PM
ricki said...she lived in california and 50k a year is nothing there,renting a home there is like having a huge mortgage. the cost of living there is outrages.i hated it there and will never return..
4-26-2011 @ 5:21PM
Shelli said...Think about this....$50K in California is like $20K-25K in the Midwest. It is poverty level, single or not. And while I'm sure she saved, remember she probably paid for her health and dental insurance out of that as well as 401K contributions, plus the basic expenses of living.
4-26-2011 @ 1:36PM
Linda said...In California, 50,000 is peanuts, even for a single person.
4-26-2011 @ 1:34PM
Mimi said...Thanks KR for stating how it truly is! My thoughts were the same as yours as I read jinasdad's comments. Fifty thousand dollars a year is not that much in So Cal! After taxes it doesn't go far. Throw in rent money, car payments, insurance, gas, utilities and living expenses and you are hardly living the high life!!
Besides, everyone is talking about her need for savings...How do you know she didn't have savings? Maybe, like the rest of us who have been laid off in this market, she went through it. My husband was in a car accident and couldn't work for 18 months. Disability hardly paid our bills. We went through our entire savings. it happens. I'm sure there are many out there who can relate to that!
Fifty grand might be a huge sum in some states, but not in CA!!!
4-26-2011 @ 1:48PM
JDSept said...since she was 23 I doubt she had the job a long, figuring to start that high up she must have had college degree. She probably had just moved into her first alone rent and used much of what she earned in the begining for home set up like furniture etc.
4-26-2011 @ 8:09PM
bill said...Unnnnnh, this 23 year old making "50K" was probably just several months into her new job when she got canned. Probably just graduated from college and landed a job. Might've paid 50K a year IF it had lasted a year - which it likely didn't. The 50K job was an illusory red herring. Turns out the 50K job was a 10K job if it was anything at all.
4-26-2011 @ 2:29PM
Tom said...You're 100% right on target!
4-26-2011 @ 3:27PM
Leslie said...Well, $50,000 is a lot of money if your living in a small town but if your living in an expensive city like Los Angeles, it's not very much because the area is so expensive to live in. Rentals are expensive and probably could not afford a home in that area with that amount of money. I would recommend that she move up the coast to Seattle, Washington, it's more affordable and she would be able to afford a home and find a job because their economy is still growing.
4-26-2011 @ 3:47PM
awrealtor said...She wasn't immediately homeless. She became homeless six months after she was laid off which is about the average time before a person hits the bottom. When you are unemployed your savings can get eaten up very quickly.
4-26-2011 @ 5:21PM
Laurie S. said...The young lady lived in Orange County. If she owned a small condo/townhouse (euphemism: "cozy cottage"), her mortgage could have been $2500. Earning $50k post taxes nets roughly $2800. With food, fuel, utilities and sundries she barely broke even when employed. Unemployment covers only 50% of a mortgage. She probably tapped her 401k in year one to help cover basic expenses. California's expensive. The state taxes hovers around 10%. I applaud the girl for not giving up.
4-26-2011 @ 8:00PM
NANCY M. said...SHE LIVES IN CALIFORNIA WHERE THE RENTS ARE PROHIBITIVELY HIGH. THAT IS WHY SHE IS COMMUTING TO WORK 80 MILES EACH DAY.
4-26-2011 @ 4:32PM
jameson said...The book is not only about homelessness but a memoir of a young woman who had a dysfunctional family. She doesn't make excuses for the mistakes she made and how many people also give into family pressures to give away or spend money they could have saved? Having noted that, she was renting her home and was forced to move in with her family (and then got evicted with only $300 in her pocket after she refused to keep doling out her money to them, way beyond rent). The book is honest but I'm sure she'll be judge as not meeting the proper standards for "homelessness." What proper standards?!
4-26-2011 @ 4:19PM
. said...Let me explain it to you when you loose your job and can't find another one, you live on your savings. Owing a house has nothing to do with anything. My house is gone, my business is gone, my alimony is gone, my job is gone, my savings is gone. I will be homeless by next month because I can not pay the rent, my bills or buy food. If you have never been in this situation thank God and be greatful everyday that you get to judge others.