Homeless Observation Paper

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For an hour I became homeless in the United States the richest country know in the modern world. I decided for my observation paper I wanted to write about something that I felt very strongly about but I didn’t know what to write about. But after leaving work one day I saw this homeless young man downtown Philadelphia right in front of city hall he was asking for money, as I watched I notice about 50 people walked past him not even looking his way. So I wonder what if felt being him, what was his story how didn’t a young man like that ended up on the streets with nowhere to call home, what do he see when he look at the world. How do he feel being look down on? At that moment, lost in my thoughts, it hit me, I decided to be him for an hour …show more content…

I smile at the old black woman and she smile back and I got off the train. I made my way of the clowned stairways leading up to the streets at the 1500 block of Market Street, coming out of city hall facing Love Park. Looking around trying to find the best place to sit giving a good view of everyone and everything. Scanning around, I realize how downtown was. The matitude of city hall and love park, Dalworth Plaza Park with people staking the lights the arts this was breath taking to me. But I was not here for site seeing and besides it was just too cold. At 32 degrees, everything sounds different. Lots of objects turn fragile, everything I frozen the water on the ground are rock hard. There are not leaves on the trees in front of city hall. You can see people breaths when they talk. At that temperature, there is absolutely no humidity in the air, it's much drier than any desert. There's thick ice fog everywhere. And the air is undeniably still. Which makes sense. At that temperature if feels like you are probably the coldest spot on Earth right then, if there was wind it would be bringing in air from somewhere else, and that air would be warmer. Everyone walking around like work at the North Pole, with extra big coats and hat and gloves on, well everyone but me. If you're wearing proper clothing it just feels colder than usual. But any exposed skin is painful, and breathing the air hurts unless you're breathing through a scarf. You can't have any exposed skin, or you'll get frostbite very quickly. But note that if you're properly dressed and active, hypothermia probably isn't going to be a problem unless you've out for a long time. The foremost danger is frostbite to the extremities, not your core

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