Welcome to No Fixed Address, a weekly series where I write candidly about what it means to be homeless—right now, in real life, not in some sanitized Hollywood version. I’m currently unhoused. Not “drifting.” Not “on a journey.” Just trying to survive in a world that looks away.
Each week, I’ll share personal accounts, hard truths, and moments that don’t make it into the movies. If you’re here to understand what homelessness actually looks like—not as a plot point, but as a life—then you’re in the right place.
This is not a cry for pity. It’s a record. A mirror. A small act of resistance.
Installment 1 * Installment 2 * Installment 3
There’s a man I see sometimes at a particular subway station who wears five coats, no socks, and sings showtunes to the column near the MetroCard machine. Not at the machine — to it. With reverence. Sometimes he calls it “Mother.” Sometimes he asks it why the moon forgot him.
Other times, he screams.
I don’t know his name, but I know his shape in the crowd. I know to give him space. I know he isn’t violent — not yet. But I also know he’s a walking nerve ending, exposed to the elements, and sooner or later, someone will provoke him. Or he’ll crack.
There are more of him now. And it’s getting harder to tell which ones are just talking to themselves, and which ones are holding it together by the thinnest thread of silence. I’ve shared benches with them. Ridden the same 2 a.m. train loops. Some mutter. Some shout. Some sob quietly into their sleeves for hours.
The line between homeless and psychologically unwell is not always the same — but it’s getting blurrier every week.
And here’s the thing: navigating the homeless landscape means navigating them, too.
And they’re not okay.
And neither are we.
I’m not here to speak over them. But I am here to say this: it is becoming genuinely dangerous to move through the city’s unhoused corridors — shelters, trains, stairwells, benches — because mental health care has utterly collapsed, and too many people have nowhere left to unravel except next to you.
I’ve had someone chase me down a platform for looking too long in their direction.
I’ve had someone follow me up a stairwell whispering “I’m not gonna hurt you” in a tone that made me believe the opposite.
I’ve seen a man bash his head against a pole until MTA police officers came to drag him away like luggage.
This isn’t “colorful city life.” This is a breakdown — of systems, of minds, of basic public safety. And every time a new person ends up on the street mid-episode, we’re all told to just accept it. Duck and weave. Look down. Dodge the danger, but show empathy. Keep your distance, but don’t dehumanize. It’s a losing equation.
There’s a rumor — more than a rumor, really — that certain New Jersey agencies have been quietly transporting individuals with severe mental health conditions across the river into New York once their Medicaid or charity care runs out. Allegedly, they’re given a one-way bus ticket and let loose near Penn Station or Port Authority.
“Not our problem anymore.”
I don’t have paperwork to prove it, but I’ve seen the fallout. The confused newcomers with hospital bracelets still on. The disoriented men asking how to get back to Hackensack or Newark. The women who say things like, “I was at a place with nurses and then I wasn’t.” You learn to read between the lines real fast out here.
Here’s the most brutal part: even the ones trying to get help often can’t. If you’re mentally unwell and homeless, the threshold to get admitted to psychiatric care is sky-high. You basically have to be actively suicidal and disruptive — and even then, you might just get a psych eval and kicked back out with a pamphlet.
And those of us just trying to survive — who aren’t (yet) in crisis — we’re left with the fallout. We dodge. We share space. We don’t sleep. We brace for the moment the shouting turns, or the eye contact lingers too long.
We’re not just sleeping rough anymore.
We’re sleeping in someone else’s breakdown.
And tomorrow, it could be our turn.
—Rhyan

“I’m not here to speak over them. But I am here to say this: it is becoming genuinely dangerous to move through the city’s unhoused corridors — shelters, trains, stairwells, benches — because mental health care has utterly collapsed, and too many people have nowhere left to unravel except next to you.”
It breaks me… to witness how humanity has crumbled, is crumbling when it comes to mental health. I have worked in the medical field for 23 years. I have watched it shape-shift into everything it has been and what it is now. Many people lack the care and concern, empathy and drive to continue to be in the positions they are currently in; it’s frightening.
Be ever-vigilant and as safe as possible out there, Rhyan. This world definitely isn’t what it should be. 🙏🏽💙
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I tend to keep myself to myself but as I am living out in public it’s akin to walking on eggshells, where each shell is a potential landmine.
Hope things are going well your way.
Cheers for the read, comment and concern, trE, all very much appreciated.
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All is as well as it can be. I will not complain.
And you’re always welcome, Rhyan.
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I’m so sorry this is happening to you, and that all of the social safety nets seem to be breaking down.
Housing and healthcare should be basic human rights.
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Iris, first allow me to apologize for the delay in responding. This was one of those weeks where the world got in the way. I just wanted to thank you for taking the time to read and respond.
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Absolutely no need to apologise. Have you thought of putting a PayPal like on your blog? I’m not exactly flush with funds, but I’d chuck you a fiver. I’m sure other people who read your work would, too.
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I didn’t want people to think that I was running some sort of scam, like the individuals who claim to have a terminal illness, in order to bilk kind-hearted folks out of their hard earned money. I just needed a place to air out my thoughts.
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Fair enough.
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