{"id":17816,"date":"2022-01-10T09:00:20","date_gmt":"2022-01-10T14:00:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wordpress-537697-2997182.cloudwaysapps.com\/?p=17816"},"modified":"2022-10-09T05:57:10","modified_gmt":"2022-10-09T09:57:10","slug":"the-average-age-of-a-homeless-person-in-america-might-surprise-you","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wordpress-537697-2997182.cloudwaysapps.com\/the-average-age-of-a-homeless-person-in-america-might-surprise-you\/","title":{"rendered":"The Average Age of a Homeless Person In America Might Surprise You"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Everything you thought you knew about the homeless population is wrong, at least if your source is the one most people cite- the media or your own personal experience<\/h2>\n

Typically, media outlets or your own eyes focus on the most visible homeless community members. This paints a picture of rough city sleepers, grown men with unkempt beards and shopping carts. Because poverty gives off an air of disgrace, and because the media cameras never fail to capture the most vulnerable members of society at their lowest moments, the actual state of homelessness is much less visible. One could even describe it as entirely invisible in the eyes of broader society.<\/span><\/p>\n

One example of this is age.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n

When you form a mental picture of a homeless person in your mind, do you gravitate toward an image of a middle-aged person? Perhaps you are picturing a war veteran at a busy intersection with a tear-jerking sign. Or maybe you envision a struggling mother wrapped in a cloak of shame, shivering in the cold.<\/span><\/p>\n

The last image is a bit closer to reality, but most people who see a woman in such a situation don’t look at the big picture.<\/span><\/p>\n

Homeless mothers and fathers have children. Heartbreakingly, their children are more emblematic of the face of homelessness in the United States.<\/span><\/p>\n

Here and now, 1 in 30 American children is homeless<\/a>, an all-time high. And the average age of a homeless person in America is just 11 years old.<\/h4>\n

The Current Face of Homelessness Belongs to a Young, Helpless Child<\/h3>\n

In an interview with the <\/span>RT TV Network featured on YouTube<\/span><\/a>, American homeless service manager Alec Rosen revealed that the average age of a homeless person in America was 11.<\/span><\/p>\n

Nationwide,\u00a0<\/span>youth homelessness is exhibiting a startling upward trend.<\/span><\/a>\u00a0It is on the rise from state to state. Some notably dramatic increases include a 700% jump in Seattle and the tripling of homeless youth in Atlanta.<\/span><\/p>\n

One service provider described the state of homelessness amongst young people as extremely emotionally damaging. Kids are “stressed out” and spend years at a time relocating from one shelter to another. The walls of their dorm-style shelter rooms are covered in colorful pictures, a gallery of broken dreams as the harsh reality takes hold.<\/span><\/p>\n

According to\u00a0<\/span>HUD<\/span><\/a>, of the 140,000 children under the age of five residing in US homeless shelters in 2017, at least 30,000 of them were infants. This has led many to speculate that the average age of an emergency shelter resident is infancy.<\/span><\/p>\n

How Many Homeless People Are Infants? The Sad Truth is Nobody Knows<\/h3>\n

As pregnant women shuffle from street corners to warming centers to shelters, the exact number of homeless infants is impossible to tally. Only those infants who survive and make it into a shelter are counted, leaving many more unaccounted for entirely.<\/span><\/p>\n

Recently, a homeless woman named\u00a0<\/span>Jessica Aldama died<\/span><\/a>\u00a0while delivering a stillborn baby by herself in an open field. Initially, officials didn’t report the newborn’s death. They only counted Jessica Aldama as a casualty.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

Later, when it was revealed that her baby had not survived either, police department representatives shockingly admitted that hiding the details of dead homeless infants is a regular practice for authorities. In the\u00a0<\/span>exact words of Boulder Police Spokesperson Sarah Huntley<\/span><\/a>:<\/span><\/p>\n

“The police department does not typically release information about unattended deaths on private property unless foul play is suspected, there is an ongoing threat to the community, or there is another investigative reason to do so.”<\/span><\/p>\n

By these standards, homeless newborns could be dying every single day, and the general population would never know. Newborns who do not survive homelessness are tragically treated as if they never existed at all. This is just one of the many daunting homeless truths the media has swept under the cradle while lulling the public to sleep.<\/span><\/p>\n

How Do Young Children Wind Up Without a Stable Residence?<\/h3>\n

Homeless commentator Alec Rosen explains that there are multiple pathways into homelessness for children. Some of the most common are:<\/span><\/p>\n