Thousands of California students are homeless. Here’s how one young woman made sure you’d never notice her – The Mercury News

Had you sat by Alizé Satberry a few years ago at Kearny High School or Herbert Hoover High School or one of several charters she attended, you might have noticed that her dresses were a few years out of style.

Maybe you flagged that she never seemed to come on a field trip.

But the fact that she, her mom and three siblings were bouncing from hotel to hotel and shelter to shelter? That probably slipped by. And she could just as easily have missed if you were in the same boat.

The thing is, it’s a crowded boat.

When Satberry and her family first got to San Diego in 2016, there were about 16,500 students countywide who lacked a steady roof, according to the California Department of Education. By last academic year the total had risen to more than 17,800, including children who’ve temporarily doubled up in houses with other families.

The problem has become so pervasive that Barrio Logan’s Monarch School, which only serves unhoused families, has started to train educators at other organizations about how to spot and care for families on the edge. In El Cajon, Carol Lewis, a leader of Little House Family Resource Services, said she’s getting calls every day about students who, say, are struggling to do homework from the cars where they sleep.

Ariel Taylor, a 20-year-old who as a teenager spent many nights in backseats, told a crowd at a November youth homelessness rally that she initially felt too ashamed to ask for help.

Ariel Taylor, 20, spoke to a small group in El Cajon about being homeless as a teenager. (Nelvin C. Cepeda / The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Ariel Taylor, 20, spoke to a small group in El Cajon about being homeless as a teenager. (Nelvin C. Cepeda / The San Diego Union-Tribune) 

Shame came up more than once during interviews with several young adults who recently lacked a stable place to live.

The feeling certainly applied to Satberry. She’s originally from Texas, but her family lost their house when the rental aid they had been receiving fell through, leading to a long stretch of crashing with anyone who had an open room.

At one point, a friend asked Satberry how she wanted her birthday coffee. Satberry asked whose birthday it was.

It’s yours, the friend said. Satberry was 16.

The family tried renting a garage in Las Vegas, but it was extremely hot. They kept moving west until they arrived in San Diego, and soon everyone was staying at the Rescue Mission’s downtown shelter.

A few days in, Satberry went to 7/11 to buy a $5 pizza. Outside she saw a homeless man asking passersby to get him water. It was a super-hot, no-breeze day, and the guy even had some money, but everybody seemed to either ignore his pleas or yell at him to leave.

Satberry bought him a water. She also realized that looking homeless changed how you were treated.

That feeling was bolstered by what she witnessed elsewhere. You weren’t allowed to stay in the shelter during the day, so each morning her family would stuff everything they owned into trash bags and find a tree to wait under. The nearby Waterfront Park has several trees, but its obvious perks (playground, restroom) came with glares from strangers and one woman who shouted that the family’s bags made the place look “tacky.”

Satberry started spending more time in the park bathroom. She would put brown shadow under her eyes to hide the bags and head off cracked lips with gloss. Even then, Satberry worried people would notice her spending 10 hours a day on the same patch of grass, so she sometimes spent those hours hiding by the toilets.

The strategy worked with strangers. Satberry occasionally overheard people in the park talking about other homeless residents but not her.

Good, she would think. I blend in.

Life got trickier once she enrolled in school. Satberry’s sleeveless dresses stuck out in a sea of skinny jeans. Questions about where she lived had to be deflected. And so what if a school dance cost “only” $45? That’s, like, nine 7/11 pizzas!

Very rarely, Satberry might tell another kid that she slept in a shelter. But because she now didn’t “look” homeless, classmates had trouble believing her. Some seemed to find it funny.

Eventually she decided it was easier to not even try making friends.

To quote Alli Walker, another local 20-something who was recently homeless: The process of constantly trying to find a place to sleep is “a seemingly unending cycle of uncertainty” that creates “loose ends left to fray.”

Satberry drew more inward. An innocuous task like “go to Target” could send her spiraling. Would employees notice that she barely had any money? Might one accuse her of shoplifting?

Satberry loved her family, but squeezing together in random rooms night after night was akin, in her words, to living in a cabin during an avalanche. Everyone was too focused on survival to offer much emotional support. She eventually stopped going to school.

Satberry didn’t feel like a kid, nor was she an adult. Sometimes she felt like nothing at all.

Alize Satberry works remotely from home a few days during the week. (Nelvin C. Cepeda / The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Alize Satberry works remotely from home a few days during the week. (Nelvin C. Cepeda / The San Diego Union-Tribune) 

A turning point for her was the first night in a shelter run by San Diego Youth Services. The facility in central San Diego serves kids as young as 12, and soon after arriving Satberry recognized some of the teens around her. They had all gone to school together without anybody realizing the others were similarly homeless.

The staff was another revelation. You could talk with them about your homelessness without fear of judgment, but you could also not talk about being homeless and still know that everybody understood what you were going through.

Satberry awoke in that shelter the day she turned 18. This, unfortunately, was a birthday she had no problem remembering. As a newly minted adult, Satberry could no longer stay in a facility for kids.

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