Housing provides a person with peace and security, offering a place we can truly call home.
A home is more than just a residence—it is a space of belonging, a source of personal comfort, and a place where we receive mail, store clothing, and safeguard memories. It is where we prepare meals of our choosing and enjoy the privacy of bathing or showering whenever we like.
Home is where we can invite friends, host gatherings, clean up, or even leave things as they are—shaping our space to match our needs and moods.
We may share our home with loved ones, raising children within its walls, or we may live alone. The definition of “home” can vary—it can be a temporary rental apartment, a hotel room on vacation, a private seaside castle, a small room in a communal apartment, or a student flat at half the price. Each of these can serve as someone’s home.
Losing this place of stability and personal strength strips a person of a fundamental anchor, leaving them homeless—a word that defines their position in the world.
Financial collapse, chronic illness, divorce, betrayal, war… There are countless reasons one might lose their home, and often, there is no easy way back. Insecurity, vulnerability, and hopelessness become markers of this loss.
This is what the conversation is about.