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'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 5 of 14)
4-26-2011 @ 12:58PM
Virgomoon said...I want to know what happened to the dog? Nothing is said about him at all. Was he just forgotten?
Reply
4-26-2011 @ 6:13PM
Gena said...Not by you!
4-26-2011 @ 12:59PM
abovethebias said...I was almost interested until she chose to blame her upbringing for her troubles. We all come from somewhere and all have a choice about what our religion will or won't be once we become adults. It seems that this girl resents her upbringing as one of Jehovah's Witnesses, but has found a way to profit from her own and others stereotypes and misunderstanding of it. She threw it in there as an attention grabber to sell her book not as a relevant addition to homelessness as the two are not related. She wants to fight stereotypes yet she is promoting and profiting from one. Way to pigeonhole an entire group of people based on one individual experience.
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4-27-2011 @ 5:31AM
HLewis said...She didn't blame her upbringing, or the religion she was brought up with, for how her life turned out. She didn't want to live with her mother because of it. For one, they probably had staunch rules she had to follow that were more akin for children, and she states that she was abused as a child, would you want to live with your abuser as an adult? She didn't say anything to the effect that "my life is so hard cause I was brought up this way, or abused." She just said that she couldn't lie with her mother because of it.
You have obviously never lived through abuse and/or neglect.
4-26-2011 @ 6:29PM
r u serious said...r u serious.. I work in a homless women and children shelter 5 days a week and this is a story that should not have goten even a second look.This story is nothing but a spoiled girl who feel down on her luck for a couple months and still was able to have a laptop and surf the web at starbucks get real. The women i work with every day are out here trying to make it everyday doing foot work trying to survive. They are at there lowes trying to reach up not fuluffing the idea of being homless and using the experince to get a book deal about what u thought u where because living in your car at walmart does not make you homless you where shelterd...THIS SICKENS ME!!!!!!!!
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4-26-2011 @ 1:21PM
funch357 said...To everyone who self-righteously asks: "Why wasn't she saving her money back when she was earning $50,000 a year? That's a lot of money!"
Well, yes...and no. Notice that she was working in ORANGE COUNTY California when she lost her job. The cost of living there is quite high compared to many other parts of the country; therefore her buying power was much lower than you think. $50k a year goes a lot further in a small city in the Midwest than it does in Orange County.
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4-27-2011 @ 5:31AM
HLewis said...I know! Not to mention that she was able to live in her apartment for several months after the lay off and make ends meet for awhile. Meaning she had saved money up. Not to mention that she was only 23, so she was fresh out of college, meaning she likely hadn't worked at her job for much more than a year, if that. You can't sock away much of a safety net in that amount of time.
4-26-2011 @ 1:11PM
Vasu Murti said...Caddy girl writes:
"She was probably another CA uber Liberal who thought all those great Social programs were great unitl SHE needed some help and was told see you. We have to take care of all the illegal aliens..."
Hey, I myself am a progressive, in CA, a "blue" state!
I think your comments are out of line.
Shortly before passing away, my friend Dave Browning (1959 - 2007), a conservative, pro-life Republican in San Diego, said he'd learned to "like socialism", because the government was paying for the surgeries necessary to correct the heart condition that would eventually cause his demise.
Though it's hard to tell from such a brief interview, I'm left with the impression Brianna Karp, author of The Girl's Guide to Homelessness, might be conservative.
Reply
4-26-2011 @ 1:12PM
butters said...She's pretty cute. I'd ask her to move in with me, but my unemployment dries up next month, and well...
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4-26-2011 @ 4:22PM
cass said...homeless white girl rebounds. Big Effin deal! How many people of colour deal with the same circumstances on a daily basis?!?!
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4-26-2011 @ 6:02PM
Paul S said...Cass and if it would have been a story about a "person of color" (is that the correct pc term??) you would be have been bit*hing that it was stereotyping people of color. Her color was was irrelevant to this story.
4-26-2011 @ 7:59PM
Charmae said...Don't be a hater sister. They are finally seeing the world through ours eyes now. Remember we are survivors. Just pray for her and yourself that we all can make it in these trying times.
4-26-2011 @ 1:28PM
J.Wilson said...Finally someone speaks out on being homeless. It is a very sad, embrassing and humbling situation to have to experience. No one wants to believe it could happen " to them ." One day you have your job, your home, your comfortable bed, food in the refridge, and running water in your indoor bathroom. Then the unthinkable happens, your secure job no longer exist. You didn't quit, you were let go. Cut backs, lost customers, what ever the reason, you're out the door.... Now what? Have you tried to get a new job lately? Good luck, my friend. Before you know it the money that was saved is disappearing at an alarming rate, where did it go.... Paying out with nothing coming in is like sand in a sieve. Homelessness cares nothing about age, color, race or where you used to work. Trying to get back to "normal", your feet back under you so to speak is the hardest thing to over come that anyone will ever have to endure. Please have a open loving heart for anyone being without a home, not pity, nor sit in judgement against another fellow human being. You never know what tomorrow holds for you.
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4-26-2011 @ 8:00PM
charmae said...Well said. Let's just pray for one another that we make it through
these trying times. Prayer changes things.
4-26-2011 @ 1:23PM
Andrea said...I hope the President and his administration are reading this, so they can understand what consequences their actions have!
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4-26-2011 @ 1:57PM
juliet dixon said...why are you blaming the president how much years did Bush have the country eight years right? and he messed it up by going to interfere with Sadam when there was no weapon of mass distruction and gave our soldiers blood for oil and then president Obama came in to a ruin country so blame bush and the republicans see now the republicans want to cut medicare in half and they wanted to shut the country down and if they had shut the country down our troops would not get paid they don't even have any respect for thier soldiers so which world are you living in?
4-26-2011 @ 1:38PM
Linda said...I am really glad to see this young woman survive and pull herself up by her boot straps.
A lot of people don't understand that when you lose your job, you can lose everything, even if you have put money by for the purpose of sustaining yourself through hard times. If you are unemployed long enough, it runs out pure and simple. She did well, kuddos to her!!!!!!!!
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4-26-2011 @ 1:27PM
xfan said...GOP being the culprit behind the 2008 recession, how come these guys together with their long damaging economic policies and back in business ??? These politicians should read and commit to self-suicide as it is they who are solely responsible ( with banks) for this catastrophie. John Boehner not only should cry but kil himself!!!
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4-26-2011 @ 1:27PM
johnnycat said...sounds to me like she pulled away from bible teachings and possibly went apostate and her blessings went away with her belifs in god . and yes jw,s home rules are strict but they live by the commandments of the bible and christs teachings . i guess her immorality and party lifestyles wasnt allowed in her parents home . that is more like what happenned . but im not the judge . lots of homeless people in america . god speed to all i wish her well and hope she gets back involved with her moms faith .
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4-26-2011 @ 1:44PM
Mimi said...Johnny- how do you know she no longer walks with God? JUst because she doesn't support her mother's chuch doesn't mean she no longer has her faith. How stupid. Perhaps she decided she didn't like how the Jehovah's Witness church is run. My experience with it's members is that they often have emotional issues. I'm not saying it's a bad church, I'm just saying maybe it wasn't the right fit for her.
And for you to imply that the Lord is teaching her some kind of lesson is ridiculous. How could you possibly know that? Did He tell you that was His plan?
And where do you get off talking about her party lifestyle? Give me a break! How do you know what she did in her personal time? You say you don't judge, but my friend, you do.