There is a lost in this message - lot of needs, no county/state mentioned, etc. So use our main page to financial help in your county or city. Scroll down the page, find the programs you need, etc.
Grace O’Connell wrote: ↑Mon Mar 16, 2026 1:18 pm Dear Sir or Madame,
As I’m sure you hear hundreds of times a day from people who, like me, depend on SSDI for their sole source of income and have no idea how to live. The amount we receive (and the very skewed percentages of our benefits the issuing governmental bodies have deemed “realistic” for living in today’s world ~ $400 per month for rent???) does not come close to covering basic needs ~ even if SNAP, Medicare/Medicaid, etc. are part of the equation…and with a 4 year waiting list for just a Section 8 interview and inexpensive housing almost impossible to find (never mind the moving costs), many of us are in danger of becoming homeless.
Please know that my circumstances ~ living, as I did before I became ill and began receiving SSDI after having to give up a lucrative career and within days any work whatsoever, in a rich neighborhood, renting an extremely expensive apartment, seeming having an abundance of creature comforters ~ are misleading, as they paint a picture of someone who has nothing to complain about given the unimaginably dire straits families with several children currently face; that said, though, the plight so many face is the same as the one I do now, losing the roof over my head and not being able to find alternate housing, or finding by some miracle a lower-rent living situation and having my benefits cut to fit the equation by which amounts are partially determined…so whether a $2000 per month rental or a $600 per month rental.
SSDI benefits are not sufficient to pay rent, utilities, non-SNAP eligible items like toilet paper, toothpaste, phone, internet (if it is necessary, as it is for me so that I can easily communicate with my many doctors and pharmacies), shampoo, etc. I’ve been told by members of SHINE, NAMI, and other individuals in the social services that staying put is, as financially impossible as the numbers are, is actually the best thing to do in the local (and I am guessing larger) government’s eyes and for my own life.
I turn to you now out of complete despair as have no other idea what to do…my physical and psychological conditions have worsened since I began receiving SSDI and the prognosis for both is that the pattern will continue (quickly, I am treatment-resistant to all medications even at their highest legal dose and just as an example, procedures that work wonders on others with severe anemia ~ infusions and full blood transfusions ~ have no effect whatsoever on me) and I will never be able to supplement my SSDI with part time work or replace it with full time work. What do I do when I can no longer pay my rent or purchase the most basic items or pay utilities (those at a reduced rate and those not)?? My research, such that it is, says that there are some avenues of financial help available but I suspect my apartment far surpasses what is considered “reasonable housing” ~ yet it is reasonable because I chose it before SSDI was even a consideration, I have a roof over my head and cannot find another, issues that would otherwise detract greatly from my life because of my various disabilities…shoveling snow, not having my primary doctor/psychiatrist, pharmacy, and grocery all literally one minute away, having upstairs neighbors who check on me, etc.….are not issues at all…except that this is the last month I will be able to afford my residence unless I can find some sort of financial assistance.
Might you have specific suggestions as to where ~ or to whom ~ I should turn for the best chance of finding that help, even if it is just temporary? Winter homelessness terrifies me.
Thank you so much for your time (we writers tend to turn out novels, not emails), your consideration, and any advice you may be able to provide.
