When times are tough, it often feels as if we are swimming through crashing waves, barely staying afloat. Making it through rough water – something everyone faces in one form or another – is a lot easier with a boat and people to help you paddle through. That’s what Daniel found at ECS Community Harm Reduction Team (C-HRT) Safe Haven.
Daniel, a C-HRT resident for just over two years, faced unexpected challenges after leaving prison, despite working hard to turn his life around. He engaged in self-help work, rehabilitation, and began the journey toward getting his degree. He was told by his parents that because he worked for a fresh start, he could move back home.
However, Daniel’s introduction back into society was not as seamless as he had hoped. His parents changed their minds, and Daniel was left with no clear direction on what to do next.
He described the situation as frustrating. “It was a feeling of a rug being pulled from under me,” Daniel said. “I wasn’t supposed to be homeless.”
Daniel is a self-described problem solver. He recalled thinking, “‘This can't be it. There has to be a solution... There has to be a better outcome.’”
His sister did what she could to help and bought Daniel a hotel room for a few days so he could find a solution. “I put in so much work going to college while incarcerated, doing self-help, and working on my rehabilitation and sobriety that I wasn't going to allow going back to the street to trigger me and then compromise my rehabilitation,” he said.
He contacted someone at Alpha Project and was offered a spot. Daniel had somewhere off of the streets to stay, but it was difficult to continue his education and rehabilitation in that environment. Thankfully, about a year later, Daniel received an opportunity to move to ECS C-HRT Safe Haven.