Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Future Worth Fighting For: Beyond the Numbness and Survival Mode

Lately, it feels like the world is spiraling. People are exhausted, overwhelmed, and struggling to keep up with everything—from the cost of living to political chaos to the sheer weight of everyday survival. In Canada, we’re seeing it firsthand: a housing crisis, rising food insecurity, deepening inequality, and policies that prioritize appearances over human lives.

The recent freeze on supportive housing in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside is just one example of how disconnected leadership has become. In the middle of winter—when the cold is deadly, when people are already suffering—politicians have decided to pause projects that could save lives. Why? Because they want to force surrounding municipalities to step up. But in the meantime, people are left with nothing.

It’s not just Vancouver, though. Across Canada, homelessness is growing, while governments focus on short-term optics instead of long-term solutions. And the worst part? So many people have become numb to it. We walk past people sleeping on the street as if it’s normal. It’s not.

Why Are We Struggling to House and Feed People?

It’s a question that shouldn’t need asking. Canada is wealthy. We have land, resources, and knowledge. So why is it getting harder to meet our most basic human needs?

Governments prioritize big events like FIFA over social programs.

Housing has become a commodity instead of a right.

The cost of food skyrockets, but wages don’t keep up.

Newcomers arrive looking for safety and opportunity but are met with high rents and low support.

Community ties are fraying—people are too exhausted or afraid to engage.

We’re watching Canada transform before our eyes. The country we knew—where neighbors helped each other, where people had hope for the future—is slipping away. But that doesn’t mean we have to accept it.


A Different Future Is Possible

Despite all of this, I refuse to believe we’re beyond repair. There is a different way forward, but it requires a shift in values. Not just from politicians, but from all of us.

Imagine this:

Small, sustainable homes instead of endless luxury towers.

Local, fresh food—Coast Salish diets, community gardens, farmers' markets.

Kids growing up surrounded by art, music, and storytelling, learning from elders instead of being glued to screens.

A society where we care for each other—where we support single moms, help elders stay in their homes, and teach men and women to be healthier, kinder, and more empathetic.

A break from the endless cycle of media and internet addiction, reconnecting with the land and each other.

This isn’t a utopian dream. It’s what people lived for generations before profit and politics took over. It’s what Indigenous communities have always known. It’s what we could have again—if we fight for it.

We Can’t Afford to Stay Numb

I get it. People are tired. The world is overwhelming. But if we let numbness take over, we lose everything. This isn’t just about homelessness or FIFA or housing—it’s about the kind of society we want to live in.

If you feel helpless, start small:

Pay attention. Question the narratives being sold to us.

Support local initiatives that actually help people.

Speak out against policies that put profit over human lives.

Reconnect—with nature, with creativity, with real human connection.

The future is being shaped right now. If we don’t fight for something better, someone else will shape it for us. And if recent decisions tell us anything, it won’t be in our best interest.

What kind of Canada do you want to live in?

Let’s build it—before it’s too late.


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