"Don't Ever Give Up"
Derek Turned His Life Around One Step At-a-Time
Derek came to City Mission on a cold, rainy day last September. He was walking out in the rain, with nowhere to go and no plan for the future. His health was deteriorating rapidly, and the outlook was bleak. Suddenly, a minivan pulled up out of nowhere, and the driver offered him a ride.
The man dropped Derek off at City Mission, and when he walked in through the doors, Pastor Paul Smith, City Mission’s Samaritan Care Coordinator at the time, met him in the doorway. “It’s going to be ok,” Pastor Paul told him. “You’re in the right place. Don’t ever give up.” Derek spent the rest of the day in the warmth of the Samaritan Care Center, watching people come in off the street to get food, drink coffee, and pray with Pastor Paul. “I saw right away that there was help here,” Derek said. “I felt ok. This was a safe place. This was where I was supposed to be. This was where I was going to get the care I needed.”
Derek didn’t always feel safe. By the time he was 15, both of his parents had died of cancer, and he was left an orphan. His older sister became his guardian, but she struggled with the death of their parents and fell heavily into a life of drugs and alcohol. “That was the lifestyle of the city,” Derek explained. He and his sister grew up in Washington DC at a time when drugs were rampant.
He started taking drugs too to cope with the loss of his parents. “I started doing crazy things to get drugs,” Derek said. “I started stealing, robbing from drug dealers. It’s only by the grace of God that I’m still here.” He was shot and stabbed. His best friend was killed. Eventually, he and his sister lost the house they grew up in, and Derek started living in the streets, sleeping under bridges or on church steps.
At 17, he was incarcerated at Lorton Reformatory in Lorton, VA. “At that time, it was one of the worst prisons in America. That was the beginning of a new day. The judge showed me no empathy. I had to grow up real fast.”
Derek’s life finally took a happy turn when he met his wife. Together, they moved to Atlanta and then to Las Vegas as she got work for different airlines. In Vegas, Derek got a job he really liked, setting up and tearing down for events. Unfortunately, the marriage ended, and his wife moved away. Derek’s health declined, and he could no longer keep up at work. Soon, he discovered he had only 15 percent function in his heart, and the prognosis was not good.
He decided to move back to the DC area to be near his family, but he struggled to find peace and a place where he could take care of himself. His ex-wife, who is from Pittsburgh, recommended City Mission.
After arriving at City Mission, his life got easier. “I’m able to lay my head down,” he said. “I had consistent rides to and from the hospital. I didn’t have to worry about where my next meal was coming from.” In January, Derek had two surgeries, and slowly, his health improved. Now, he is feeling better than he has in a long time.
“When I wake up in the morning, I feel blessed,” he said. Since coming to City Mission, Derek has been able to get life-saving surgeries, learn to manage his diabetes, gain certifications in retail and forklift operation, and work on his housing situation. “City Mission is a place to gather your thoughts – to make a plan and lay out your future.”
Recently, Derek moved out of City Mission and into his own place. He turned his life around here at City Mission. You can help the next person who walks through our doors. Please DONATE to the City Mission.