0 0 AlIkk AdMIL - Al 191- ._ 0 The Michigan Daily -- Wednesday, January 9, 2008 Campus's obstacle course ome on, Allie," my team- mate Mike called over to me. "You've got this!" I was holding everyone up - which was somewhat understand- able, as I was staring at a giant slab of concrete. And though the sensi- ble thing would be to walk around it or not to be here in the first place, in a rarelyused corner of the School of Dentistry courtyard, I had other plans. Encountering a wall in the sport of parkour means there's no way to the other side but over. As I eyed my stubbornly con- crete adversary, I was praying that this time I'd be able to keep the skin on my knees. My poor legs already bore the scrapes of a dozen failed attempts to do a "lazy vault," but my pride was chafing worst of all. Cursing under my breath and launching myself forward, I swung my hips up, and felt a rush of glee as I found my feet stumbling for- ward on the other side. It was the first time I had managed a vault. I swelled with pride. For reasons unknown to me at the time, I recently took up one of the most illogical, absurd and ulti- mately fulfilling sports available. When questioned by my friends, concerned about my limbs' dimin- ishing stretches of unscathed skin, HOMELESS From Page 5B Washtenaw County has differ- ent plans for people who have had difficulty climbing out of home- lessness. In 2004, the county began an ambitious initiative called the Blueprint to End Homelessness that ambitiously plans to eradicate homelessness in the area by 2014. The plan aims to strengthen communication between the county's homeless assistance organizations which has led to the specialization of responsibil- ity for all centers. This specializa- tion includes the evolution of more concrete roles such as fundraiser, housing development and health care organizations. The plan is also creating a database of shared records that help track a homeless person's interaction with different programs in the network. The shift to viewing the coun- ty's separate organizations as a network for an unified movement I'm faced with the near impossible task of explaining parkour without sounding nutty. Basically, it's turned campus into my personal obstacle course. Where you see a construction fence directing you another way, park- our practitioners see a beckoning hurdle in their quest for the short- est route possible - and they'll use a mixture of gymnastics, break dancing, rock climbing and martial arts to achieve it. Too often, parkour is confused with buildering, the climbing of buildings, or Yamakasi, the dare- devil bastard child of parkour and movie stunts. Far from being flashy exhibitionism, the motives of par- kour are rather Zen. The sport's athletes, called traceurs, seek "flow:" an understanding of their surroundings, a oneness with their environment and freedom from physical and mental obstacles. And the mental obstacles can be just as real. As a new convert to the Michi- gan Parkour Crew, I often find myself marveling at the grace and agility of my teammates. They have the coordination to move well and the self-assurance to practice. And it takes great self-assurance. You must either have to enjoy the spot- coincides with a changing approach to homelessness management, said Chuck Keefer, director of the Washtenaw Housing Alliance, a coalition of 26 county agencies that collaborated on the Blueprint plan. Keefer said leaders of the agen- cies have stopped looking into expanding shelter programs in order to provide more beds, and have started focusing wholly on preventing and correcting home- lessness by creating subsidized housing projects and outreach ini- tiatives to assist low-income people before they lose their homes. "The emphasis of the housing infrastructure has really shifted from management of the crisis of homelessness to solving the prob- lem of homelessness," he said. "With every shelter we build we haven't done anything at all to end homelessness." The agencies have made progress with their plan, creating about 200 apartments this year, and the blue- print has spread to other counties. In 2006, a state initiative mandated light or be convinced of your own egoists. It's absolutely wholesome. invisibility to comfortably parkour Unfortunately, certain authority in public. I'm still working on that figures see something else in what part. we do. And though many authority But the beauty of parkour, and figures warm up to the sport once they understand its rationale, for others it's easy to jump to conclu- sions about a group of strangely- W here you see behaving young adults in hoodies. One day, sprinting around the a wall, corner and ducking under the pine tree, I scrambled awkwardly up a parkour fans see wall near University Health Ser- vices and paused for a moment, a challenge gasping for breath and trying to ignore the stares from passers-by as I looked for a way down. I was one of the things that keeps me running our new timed circuit, kicking my own ass twice a week at which circled through the Den- the Michigan Parkour practices, is tistry building and adjacent park- the sport's underlying commitment ing complexes. Hopping down off to acceptance of anyone willing to a low ledge, I continued forward, give it a shot. David Belle, one of running across benches and dash- the sport's founders, famously said, ingup stairs. "Tell me how you move and I'll tell I felt a rising sparkle of excite- you who you are." ment. Before then, I hadn't been Anyone can offer a new form of able to complete one of the wall movement. Anyone can come up climbs up the parking structure, with a new way of interacting with but had an idea for a new foot- a lamppost. hold to try. I furrowed my brow, Every parkour crew I've ever and with a running start, I got my encountered has been a study in hands and arms up over the wall. I positive group dynamics. Individu- felt euphoric with the success. I felt als and the group grow together. unstoppable. There are no points, no losers, no "Stop!" I stopped. Dropping down to the floor again, I turned around and came face to face with a parking guard. Her mouth was set in a thin line. She was not pleased. Irate would be an accurate description. "What do. you think you're doing?," she said. "This is not a playground!" I opened my mouth to try to actually explain what I thought I was doing, but saved my breath. With a meek apology, I hurried off to the stairs, listeningto her shouts that the police were being notified. When I arrived back at the start- ing point, out of breath in my haste to deliver the message, the rest of the crew laughed. Apparently, everyone running the circuitbefore me had received an identical warn- ing. Our personal quests to over- come all of life's obstacles weren't a good reason to affront the prized walls of a parking structure. Yet, for all of the bumps, scrapes and public chastisement, the rush of parkour has become my new drive. I'm going for the speed vault next. -Allison Ghaman is an associate design editor for The Michigan Daily and an LSA sophomore savings. Administrators of local relief organizations said that an increase in demand for food fore- warns that the economic straits of many may soon lead to homeless- ness. Of course, lines at soup kitch- ens that stretch around the block remain unlikely. The influx of people into the homeless popula- tion that some experts anticipate wouldn't be so large that the aver- age person would notice. But, as the state's history with homelessness has shown, that's part of the prob- lem. When homelessness remains a vague, misunderstood taboo, people slip through the cracks who would never seem to fit the popular profile of a homeless person. And while the last decade has given way to a significant change in homeless- ness relief, homelessness preven- tion agencies in Washtenaw County and statewide will have to fight to maintain the movement's momen- tum when state and local funding wars begin to ignore a barely vis- ible class. that every area adopt a similar pro- gram, and now most counties have 10-year programs of their own. Keefer said the shift is an eco- nomically smart departure from how most cities have handled homelessness in the past, citing statistics reporting that keeping people in subsidized housing is a third s expensive per day as keep- ing them in jail and half as expen- sive as keeping them in temporary shelters. In some sense, creating afford- able housing in times of economic struggle is undoing what happened duringtimes offiscalliveliness. The gentrification of many cities' down- towns removed older, low-rent apartments to make way for chain restaurants and specialty shops. Involuntary homelessness was not as widespread a few decades ago as it is today, Keefer said. "Historically it hasn't always been this social problem we call homelessness," he said. But despite an apparent an increase in homeless relief across the state, consequences of econom- ic pitfalls of the last few years will likely make the 10-year deadline impossible to meet, and could even test the shelter system's ultimate capacity. Organizations that provide food have recently seen a large spike in their number of clients, said Eileen Spring, executive director of Food Gatherers, a Washtenaw County agency that collects edible food from groceries after sell-by dates to distribute to needy people. She said Food Gatherers ran out of food for the first time this summer.. "Food banks throughout Michi- gan have experienced significant increase in demand - the last two years, especially," Spring said. "We are designed as a supplementary program, not to provide bread and butter type of services - and we're definitely providing bread and but- ter type of services." Collins said the boost might con- sist of people who were laid off a long time ago and are coming to the end of their unemployment pay and