
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Life can change in an instant. One day you’re shopping at Saks Fifth Avenue, and the next you’re sitting in your car with everything you own, and everyone you love, wondering what happens now.
Joan Howard grew up in Beverly Hills with every advantage until a series of crises left her homeless and living in her car with her mother and three dogs. What helped her rebuild wasn't luck or charity. It was kindness, consistency, and one simple weekly practice of being in service to others.
Today, Joan is a long-time volunteer for Food on Foot, the very organization that helped her decades ago. Food on Foot is more than a meal line—it’s a community built on dignity, kindness, and practical support for people experiencing homelessness in Los Angeles. Their model helps people find work, save money, build confidence, and move forward with independence.
In this episode, we talk about what homelessness actually looks like, why service can be transformative, and how organizations like Food on Foot help people not just get back on their feet, but build a future.
This is A Bit of Optimism.
---------------------------
To learn more about Food on Foot, visit their website!
https://www.foodonfoot.org/
---------------------------
By Simon Sinek4.8
19491,949 ratings
Life can change in an instant. One day you’re shopping at Saks Fifth Avenue, and the next you’re sitting in your car with everything you own, and everyone you love, wondering what happens now.
Joan Howard grew up in Beverly Hills with every advantage until a series of crises left her homeless and living in her car with her mother and three dogs. What helped her rebuild wasn't luck or charity. It was kindness, consistency, and one simple weekly practice of being in service to others.
Today, Joan is a long-time volunteer for Food on Foot, the very organization that helped her decades ago. Food on Foot is more than a meal line—it’s a community built on dignity, kindness, and practical support for people experiencing homelessness in Los Angeles. Their model helps people find work, save money, build confidence, and move forward with independence.
In this episode, we talk about what homelessness actually looks like, why service can be transformative, and how organizations like Food on Foot help people not just get back on their feet, but build a future.
This is A Bit of Optimism.
---------------------------
To learn more about Food on Foot, visit their website!
https://www.foodonfoot.org/
---------------------------

1,457 Listeners

11,883 Listeners

21,223 Listeners

1,660 Listeners

8,798 Listeners

9,153 Listeners

4,059 Listeners

27,764 Listeners

667 Listeners

29,348 Listeners

629 Listeners

21,375 Listeners

168 Listeners

280 Listeners

8,450 Listeners