A little ‘holiday magic’ at Someone Cares Soup Kitchen
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LOLITA HARPER
Lourine Clemons won’t be coming back to the Someone Cares Soup
Kitchen anytime soon and manager Shannon Santos couldn’t be happier.
While Shannon loves Lourine and her two children, she loves it
even more when regulars at the soup kitchen find themselves in a
position that they no longer need her help.
“We are just so happy for her,” Shannon said. “I love it when this
happens.”
In this case, Lourine will move into her own apartment in
Fullerton, thanks to the generosity of a woman named Anna Gallashaw
and a little “holiday magic,” which made it all possible.
Lourine became homeless in August when her Norwalk apartment
building was condemned and she had to move. Because she was living on
a very tight budget -- making the most of each disability check --
she was unable to come up with enough money for the usual first
month’s rent and deposit that are required to rent a place.
After a brief stint with a family member in Pomona, Lourine ended
up in a Costa Mesa shelter.
“I knew that I wanted to be in Orange County,” she said. “It is
just so nice here and nice for the children.”
She continued to search for a place of her own, applying with
managers of apartments in north Orange County, where rents are
slightly lower.
“I had actually put in my application for this place a long time
ago,” Lourine said. But because of a few bad marks on her credit
report and her inability to come up with the money needed for the
initial move in, she continued her residency at the shelter -- and
her meals at the soup kitchen.
That was until Anna Gallashaw came along. Anna offered the $2,454
Lourine needed to get her new place. And Terry, the apartment
manager, bent a couple of rules after hearing Lourine’s story.
“Everyone just seemed to be so moved by all this,” Shannon said.
Lourine and her children spent a final afternoon at the soup
kitchen on New Year’s Eve, saying good-bye to friends and fueling up
for the move. She sat quietly in a chair, with her daughter on one
side and her son on the other. “I am just so grateful,” she said
repeatedly.
She spoke of finally being able to sleep in her own bed, have her
own room, cooking in her own kitchen and having a permanent address
to put on her children’s school enrollment papers. Her children had
been out of school all year.
All are things that so many of us take for granted, yet they were
things that would absolutely make her year.
Her new apartment had two-bedrooms and a “nice little patio.” The
apartment complex has a pool and plenty of laundry facilities, she
said. She is on the first floor, so she doesn’t have to worry about
dragging bags of groceries up the stairs. And the best part?
“Our place is right across the street from their school,” she
said, with an unusually excited inflection in her normally calm
speech.
Her bedroom would be decorated mostly in earth tones, she said, or
leopard.
“I do like leopard print,” Lourine said after her daughter
reminded her of her affinity for animal prints.
The children will share a room and will have to compromise on what
portion will be decorated in Winnie the Pooh and how much space Buzz
Lightyear items will get. At least there is a common Disney thread.
Of course, the decorations, finishing touches and even a lot of
the furniture will all come in due time, the most important thing is
that the Clemons family is no longer homeless.
“I am just so grateful to be so blessed,” Lourine said. “Really,
you guys will have to come over, when I get settled.”
* LOLITA HARPER is the community forum editor. She also writes
columns Wednesdays and Fridays. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275
or by e-mail at [email protected].
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