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  • Don't you love a good nap?

  • (Laughter)

  • Just stealing away that small block of time

  • to curl up on your couch for that sweet moment of escape.

  • It's one of my favorite things,

  • but something I took for granted

  • before I began experiencing homelessness as a teenager.

  • The ability to take a nap is only reserved for stability and sureness,

  • something you can't find

  • when you're carrying everything you own in your book bag

  • and carefully counting the amount of time you're allowed to sit in any given place

  • before being asked to leave.

  • I grew up in Atlanta, Georgia,

  • bouncing from house to house

  • with a loving, close-knit family

  • as we struggled to find stability

  • in our finances.

  • But when my mom temporarily lost herself to mania

  • and when that mania chose me as its primary scapegoat

  • through both emotional and physical abuse,

  • I fled for my safety.

  • I had come to the conclusion that homelessness was safer for me

  • than being at home.

  • I was 16.

  • During my homelessness, I joined Atlanta's 3,300 homeless youth

  • in feeling uncared for,

  • left out and invisible each night.

  • There wasn't and still is not any place

  • for a homeless minor to walk off the street

  • to access a bed.

  • I realized that most people thought of homelessness

  • as some kind of lazy, drug-induced squalor and inconvenience,

  • but that didn't represent my book bag full of clothes and schoolbooks,

  • or my A+ grade point average.

  • I would sit on my favorite bench downtown

  • and watch as the hours passed by

  • until I could sneak in a few hours of sleep

  • on couches, in cars,

  • in buildings or in storage units.

  • I, like thousands of other homeless youth, disappeared into the shadows of the city

  • while the whole world kept spinning

  • as if nothing at all had gone terribly wrong.

  • The invisibility alone almost completely broke my spirit.

  • But when I had nothing else, I had the arts,

  • something that didn't demand

  • material wealth from me in exchange for refuge.

  • A few hours of singing, writing poetry

  • or saving up enough money

  • to disappear into another world at a play

  • kept me going and jolting me back to life when I felt at my lowest.

  • I would go to church services on Wednesday evenings

  • and, desperate for the relief the arts gave me,

  • I would go a few hours early,

  • slip downstairs

  • and into a part of the world where the only thing that mattered

  • was whether or not I could hit the right note in the song

  • I was perfecting that week.

  • I would sing for hours.

  • It gave me so much strength to give myself permission

  • to just block it all out and sing.

  • Five years later, I started my organization, ChopArt,

  • which is a multidisciplinary arts organization for homeless minors.

  • ChopArt uses the arts as a tool for trauma recovery

  • by taking what we know about building community

  • and restoring dignity

  • and applying that to the creative process.

  • ChopArt is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia,

  • with additional programs in Hyderabad, India, and Accra, Ghana,

  • and since our start in 2010,

  • we've served over 40,000 teens worldwide.

  • Our teens take refuge

  • in the transformative elements of the arts,

  • and they depend on the safe space ChopArt provides for them to do that.

  • An often invisible population uses the arts to step into their light,

  • but that journey out of invisibility is not an easy one.

  • We have a sibling pair, Jeremy and Kelly,

  • who have been with our program for over three years.

  • They come to the ChopArt classes every Wednesday evening.

  • But about a year ago,

  • Jeremy and Kelly witnessed their mom seize and die right in front of them.

  • They watched as the paramedics failed to revive her.

  • They cried as their father

  • signed over temporary custody to their ChopArt mentor, Erin,

  • without even allowing them to take an extra pair of clothes on their way out.

  • This series of events broke my heart,

  • but Jeremy and Kelly's faith and resolve in ChopArt

  • is what keeps me grounded in this work.

  • Kelly calling Erin in her lowest moment,

  • knowing that Erin would do whatever she could

  • to make them feel loved and cared for,

  • is proof to me that by using the arts as the entry point,

  • we can heal and build our homeless youth population.

  • And we continue to build.

  • We build with Devin,

  • who became homeless with his family

  • when his mom had to choose between medical bills or the rent.

  • He discovered his love of painting through ChopArt.

  • We build with Liz,

  • who has been on the streets most of her teenage years

  • but turns to music to return to herself

  • when her traumas feel too heavy for her young shoulders.

  • We build for Maria,

  • who uses poetry to heal

  • after her grandfather died in the van

  • she's living in with the rest of her family.

  • And so to the youth out there experiencing homelessness,

  • let me tell you,

  • you have the power to build within you.

  • You have a voice through the arts

  • that doesn't judge what you've been through.

  • So never stop fighting to stand in your light

  • because even in your darkest times,

  • we see you.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

Don't you love a good nap?

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B1 中級

TED】マリカ・ホワイトリー。芸術がホームレスの若者をどのように癒し、構築するか (芸術がホームレスの若者をどのように癒し、構築するか|マリカ・ウィットリー) (【TED】Malika Whitley: How the arts help homeless youth heal and build (How the arts help homeless youth heal and build | Malika Whitley))

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    Zenn に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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