About the Warm Words Project

 

Imagine your worst day. Imagine the time when you thought you couldn’t take another step. Remember the moment you felt most alone in the world. Was there someone who offered a kind word, a small gesture that kept you going? Did you wish someone had? Why not be that person for another? By preparing just a little, donation items are easily distributable one at a time as resources and opportunities allow. Our small efforts can mean life change for another, if only for a moment. 

The Warm Words Project is a community-based outreach initiative of neighbors helping neighbors experiencing homelessness and/or domestic violence. Neighbors gift hats, blankets, food, water, shelter/food bank information and writing journals, encouraging the sharing of stories without judgement.

A response to 2025 unemployment, hunger and domestic violence in local communities, the Warm Words Project is a local  outreach run by and sourced by local community members working for community members. If you would like to begin your own Warm Words Project community outreach, please contact us. We are happy to help.

“One of America’s most visible yet least understood challenges….”

The National Alliance to End Homelessness identifies homelessness as affecting “…people from all walks of life who struggle due to economic hardship, lack of affordable housing, or other systemic barriers. The reality is that most people are forced into homelessness by circumstances beyond their control. The solutions lie in systemic changes, not quick fixes.”

Adults, veterans, elderly, unaccompanied youth….

The Warm Words Project seeks to support individuals experiencing homelessness and domestic violence across the spectrum, including adults, veterans, elderly and youth of diverse backgrounds and faiths.

Financial stressors are a common trigger for abuse. With the rise in living costs, the National Coalition for the Homeless reports “…the cost of rental housing greatly exceeds wages earned by low-income renter households. For example, a full-time worker needs to earn on average $25.82 per hour to afford a modest two-bedroom rental and $21.21 hourly to afford a one-bedroom (National Low Income Housing Coalition, 2022). However, the national minimum wage is only $7.25….” Homelessness is an epidemic in the United States, one that can unexpectedly affect any one of us in a confluence of circumstances.

24 people per minute….

The National Domestic Violence Hotline estimates an “…average of 24 people per minute are victims of rape, physical violence or stalking by an intimate partner in the United States — more than 12 million women and men over the course of a single year….”

Local scale, local communities….

Through a secular initiative, the Warm Words Project neither judges nor seeks to convert. Rather, it focuses on active humanitarian solutions at local, individual scale. Resources flow directly from person to person within communities.

Where several organizations focus on national and statewide outreach, the Warm Words Project focuses on local efforts. Neighbors helping neighbors finding momentary acts of kindness through preparation and engagement. There is no central donation center, but rather, an initiative built on an idea: people still care about people if they choose to care.

Keep a few Warm Words Project hats in your car. Carry one with you as you walk your dog. Throw one in your shopping bag as you walk to the market. When you see a neighbor experiencing homelessness, offer a Warm Words Project hat. Encourage them to share their story.

If you or someone you know is experiencing homelessness and/or domestic violence, contact:

National Unhoused Hotline

PHONE 211

221.org

National Domestic Violence Hotline

1.800.799.SAFE

CHAT LIVE NOW

TEXT “START” to 88788

thehotline.org

 

BE A WARM WORDS ADVOCATE

Why Words?

For those of us who have ever experienced homelessness and/or domestic violence, our words are too often left behind, minimized, disregarded by our abusers, our families, our friends, our communities, our governments…. Words are our power. Words not only communicate the depth and breadth of our experiences and journeys, they offer an opportunity for realization of Self in our own bodies and expressions. Words give realization to the individual. Words empower.

“If you have some power [resources, food, voice…], then your job is to empower somebody else….” —Toni Morrison

 

Where outreach organizations often focus on national and statewide missions, the Warm Words Project focuses on local efforts with a central mission: neighbors helping neighbors through acts of kindness created with preparation and engagement. There is no central donation center, but rather, an initiative built on an idea: people choosing to care on a daily and local scale. If you care and want to be a Warm Words advocate and begin your own outreach in your community, contact us. We would love to help you get started.

Create Your Own Warm Words Kit

Warm Words kits can be hats or blankets or bags filled with a small granola bar, small water, shelter information, food bank information and a small writing journal and pen because everyone’s words matter. Add a few dollars if you are able and inclined to do so. Write local shelter and food bank phone numbers and key info in the journal. Here is one way to package for easy distribution:

A beanie hate makes a useful and roomy “bag.” Tie the beanie and throw it in your car, your shopping bag, your bike basket. Keep it handy and easily distributable.

Throw a few Warm Words hats in your car. Carry one with you as you walk your dog. Throw one in your shopping bag as you go to the market. When you see a neighbor experiencing homelessness, offer a Warm Words hat. Encourage them to share their story at the Warm Words Project.

SUBMIT

Would you like to share your journey of homelessness and/or domestic violence with the Warm Words Project? We want to listen. Submit your essay.

The Warm Words Project is a community-based outreach initiative of neighbors helping neighbors experiencing homelessness and/or domestic violence. Through momentary acts of kindness, Warm Words advocates distribute hats, blankets, food, water, shelter/food bank information and writing journals, encouraging the sharing of stories without judgement.