After bouncing between jobs and coping with medical problems while trying to finish her education, Lunette Wimberly wound up living outside. She worried not only for her own health and well-being but for the safety of her beloved cat Tillamook.
Kenton Women’s Village, one of Portland’s earliest and most successful experiments with transitional housing, offered a safe haven for both of them.
At the tiny home community in North Portland, “For the first time in my life, I had a safe space of my own to work on both my personal goals of managing myself, my mental health, my cat, my everything day-to-day, as well as how do I give my energy to the community around me,” Wimberly said.
Read more at the link in our bio.
📸: killendave
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