A Very Lakin Art Show

A Very Lakin Art Show Quarterly art + music shows in Spokane • Supporting housing, homelessness & recovery

06/11/2026
06/08/2026

Gary did not become homeless all at once.

First, he got a divorce.

Paying for an apartment by himself was expensive, but Gary managed to squeak by each month.

Until his car broke down and he could not afford to fix it.

Unable to get to work reliably, he got fired.

Without a job, Gary got evicted.

Afraid to stay at a shelter, Gary tried to find places outside to sleep at night. It was summer, so he wouldn’t freeze, at least.

One night Gary got jumped by a couple of guys. In the melee, he got hit in the head with a baseball bat. Lying unconscious, his attackers rifled through his pockets and found nothing worth taking.

Gary woke up in a hospital bed with blurry vision, the worst headache of his life and a few stitches.

Gary also had something that made all of his prior problems look small: a traumatic brain injury.

That injury changed what Gary could do. A hit to the frontal lobe can make memory, judgment, impulse control and social filters much harder. Gary started saying things he never would have said before (“disinhibition”) because he didn’t know they were offensive. He also struggled remembering anything but the simplest instructions.

Those two things made steady work impossible.

Gary has not been able to hold down a job for more than a few days since his injury.

Gary will never get back on his feet again without intensive support… EVER.

Homelessness has Patterns
Homelessness has many patterns that shape it.

One is what I’ll call the “Domino Effect.”

The basic idea is simple: One bad thing does not guarantee the next bad thing, but it does increase the odds.

Most people who get a divorce will not end up homeless, but it increases the risk.

Studies have shown that it is one of the leading drivers of homelessness.

Most people who become homeless will not take a baseball bat to the head, but it makes it more likely.

When someone becomes homeless the risk of violence against them is increased by a factor of 9,000. (No, you’re not reading that wrong).

Not surprisingly, 53% of individuals who have been homeless for over a year have a traumatic brain injury. (No, you’re not reading that wrong either.)

The Domino Effect takes people who could have been helped cheaply and turns their lives into something much more harder, much more expensive, to repair.

A few hundred dollars would have fixed Gary’s car.

Now he will either be homeless or need a fully subsidized apartment for the rest of his life.

So, what do we do?

There a few lessons in here:
1) Small problems ignored early, cause big problems later.

One-by-one, the people living on your streets are becoming permanently unemployable if your community doesn’t have adequate shelter and services.

2) Once a person reaches a certain point, there is no coming back.

Someone with a bad enough brain injury is unemployable. Calling them lazy and threatening to take away their subsidized housing if they don’t get a job doesn’t change that.

3) Homelessness is not as hopeless as it seems.

We need to stop treating homelessness like a random collection of bad choices.

It has patterns… and patterns can be interrupted.

The “Science of Homelessness” is a new endeavor, but in a few decades we have already learned a lot, and we learn more every day.

Have a great week!

Peace,
Ryan

Check this out!
05/29/2026

Check this out!

NEXT Wednesday, June 3, 2026, 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM
Empower communities to understand how the Spokane City Council operates and to engage confidently in local government decision-making. Learn about the Council process and effective testimony, and hear from panel members who regularly interact with the Council.
Council Chambers, City Hall, 808 W. Spokane Falls Blvd

05/21/2026

Spokane showed up in a big way. ❤️

Sunday’s A Very Lakin Art Show completely filled the space with art, music, storytelling, generosity, and community — and together we raised over $3,200 for Recovery Café Spokane.

Thank you to every artist who donated work, every musician who performed, every volunteer who helped behind the scenes, and every person who came out to support something hopeful.

This project is built by people who care deeply about Spokane and the people in it… and seeing that room full of connection honestly meant a lot.

More soon. This is only the beginning.





05/18/2026

Today was incredible. Thank you to everyone who came out to support A Very Lakin Art Show. Seeing so many people gather around art, music, generosity, and community meant more than we can fully express. Thank you to every artist, volunteer, musician, donor, and guest who helped make this such a beautiful day for Spokane.



05/15/2026

One of the things I’ve loved most while putting together A Very Lakin Art Show is getting to know the artists behind the work.

This artist is a construction worker by trade — someone who works with his hands every day — and also happens to create incredible paintings in his spare time. He’s colorblind too, which makes the way he experiences and builds visual art even more fascinating to me.

There’s something really beautiful about people quietly carrying creativity inside them while living completely ordinary lives.

That’s what this show is about.

Over 20 local artists.
Live music.
Free admission.
100% volunteer-run.

And every piece sold helps support Recovery Café Spokane.

Sunday • Spokane Art School • 1–5 PM

05/10/2026

Local artist Ander is creating the raffle piece for next Sunday’s show ❤️

$5 raffle tickets • Free admission • Live music • Community art • Supporting Recovery Café Spokane

Sunday, May 17
1–5 PM
Spokane Art School

Address

Spokane, WA

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