Making the unseen visible.
WAG (Women & Girls in Crisis) is an awareness and advocacy initiative focused on the growing, often hidden crisis of homelessness, housing instability, and displacement among women and girls.
While homelessness is frequently associated with men living visibly on the streets, many women and girls experience it differently, couch surfing, living in cars, remaining in unsafe relationships, or cycling through temporary arrangements that keep them out of sight and out of statistics. These realities are rarely discussed, poorly documented, and inadequately addressed.
WAG exists to name what is often ignored.
Why WAG Exists
Women and girls are uniquely vulnerable when housing becomes unstable. Safety concerns, caregiving responsibilities, financial dependency, and social stigma force many into survival strategies that are invisible but deeply destabilizing.
As a result:
Their experiences are undercounted. Their needs are misunderstood. Their voices are rarely centered in policy or public dialogue.
WAG was created to bring awareness to these gaps and challenge the narratives that keep this crisis hidden.
What WAG Focuses On
WAG is not a service provider. It is a platform for awareness, education, and truth-telling.
Our work centers on:
Hidden homelessness and displacement. The intersection of housing insecurity and intimate relationships. How women remain in unsafe or unstable situations to avoid exposure, danger, or separation from children. Systemic failures that leave women and girls without viable exit options.
Through writing, conversation, and community engagement, WAG aims to create language around experiences that are often endured in silence.
How This Work Shows Up
WAG currently takes shape through:
Blog posts and written reflections. Educational content and research-based discussion. Community dialogue and storytelling. Advocacy-driven awareness projects.
This platform is evolving, with the intention of expanding its reach and impact over time.
Why This Matters Here
WAG is rooted in the same principle that guides my private work:
clarity changes outcomes.
When experiences remain unnamed, they remain unresolved. By bringing visibility to the realities women and girls face during crisis and displacement, WAG seeks to support more informed conversations, better systems, and ultimately safer paths forward.
Looking Ahead
WAG is in its early stages. As the platform grows, future initiatives may include:
Resource curation. Collaborative advocacy efforts. Partnerships with aligned organizations. Expanded public education.
