You Can Stop Reading Now
People tell you to keep looking.
They mean well.

They imagine looking for housing means scrolling through listings over a morning coffee, sending a few messages, arranging a viewing, signing a lease, and moving in.
That isn’t what it looks like from this side.
Looking for housing becomes a part-time job.
Marketplace.
Kijiji.
Craigslist.
Castanet.
Refresh.
Refresh.
Refresh.
A new listing appears.
Read it carefully.
Does it say student only?
Female only?
Working professional?
No disability assistance?
Shared kitchen?
Shared bathroom?
No overnight guests?
No smoking?
No pets?
Ground floor?
Near transit?
Start again.
Eventually you develop a template because introducing yourself from scratch three hundred times isn’t practical anymore.
You explain that you have stable disability income.
That you have references.
That you’ve owned homes before.
That you’re quiet.
That you don’t smoke.
That you spend most of your time behind a computer.
That you use a wheelchair for distance but not inside the suite.
That all you really need is somewhere secure to store it out of the weather.
Then you wait.
Sometimes the reply comes within minutes.
Sometimes the conversation lasts several messages.

Sometimes there’s even hope.
“Would you like to come for a viewing?”
You begin thinking maybe this is the one.
Then you answer one more question.
“Do you work?”
“I receive disability assistance.”
Or—
“I use a wheelchair.”
And suddenly…
Nothing.
No explanation.
No refusal.
No “I’m sorry.”
Just silence.
The conversation simply ends.
I don’t know why.
Maybe another applicant got there first.
Maybe they changed their mind.
Maybe they decided the suite wasn’t suitable.
Maybe they stopped reading when they reached the word wheelchair.
Maybe it was disability assistance.
I can’t prove what happened inside someone else’s head.
What I can document is the pattern.
After hundreds of inquiries over months, you stop being surprised when another conversation quietly disappears.
People often ask why someone experiencing homelessness doesn’t “just rent a room.”
That’s a reasonable question—if you’ve never had to try.
Because “just rent a room” assumes there is a room.
It assumes the advertised price stays the advertised price.
It assumes the listing is still available.
It assumes the landlord replies.
It assumes they reply a second time.
It assumes you fit the profile they were hoping for.
It assumes your income source isn’t quietly judged before your character ever has a chance to be.
During my search, I viewed only a handful of places.
One changed the advertised rent.
Another turned out to be significantly more expensive than expected.
Another wasn’t really suitable.
Another wasn’t accessible to my circumstances.
Many others never became viewings at all.
They became unread messages.
Or conversations that simply… ended.
At the same time, people talk about rents coming down.
Four percent.
Five percent.
Statistics are useful.
They tell us what the market is doing.
They don’t tell us what it feels like to live inside the market.
Average rents don’t answer Messenger messages.
Vacancy rates don’t return phone calls.
Housing reports don’t tell you why another conversation stopped after you disclosed that you receive disability assistance.
Or that you use a wheelchair.
There is another number that never appears in housing reports.
The number of introductions.
The number of hopes.
The number of times you write:
“Hi…”

Only to watch another conversation disappear.
People think homelessness begins when you lose your home.
Sometimes it begins much earlier.
Sometimes it begins with hundreds of conversations that never become doors.
Sometimes it begins the moment someone decides—
without ever saying it—
you can stop reading now.
Update – July 6, 2026
One day after publishing this, another housing report landed in my inbox.
It reported that the average asking rent for a one-bedroom in the Central Okanagan increased to $1,642 in June, while the average asking rent for a two-bedroom rose to $2,234—the first month this year that both averages increased together.
Statistics like these are important.
They describe the market.
They still don’t describe the search.
The hours spent refreshing listings.
The hundreds of introductions.
The conversations that quietly end.
Or the uncertainty of waiting for one person to decide whether you will have somewhere to live next week.
The numbers changed.
The experience didn’t.
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