• Skip to main content
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer

Career Day is Friday, February 20! See you all there.

WESTERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY VJ&P

BECOME A PART OF OUR PROUD TRADITION

  • Home
  • About
    • What we do
    • Our courses
    • Our Faculty
    • Contact
  • Industry Engagement
    • Beyond Graduation
    • Awards and Recognition
    • The Mountain Workshops
    • Our graduates
    • Student internships
    • Our guests
    • NPPA Student Chapter
  • Scholarships
    • Program Awards
    • Recipients
  • Equipment
  • STUDENT WORK

All Too Human by Arthur Trickett-Wile

February 12, 2025

According to a federal report released by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Kentucky saw a nearly 10 percent increase in the number of individuals experiencing homelessness from 2023 to 2024. According to the 2024 Kentucky Housing Corporation “K-Count,” in Bowling Green, the seat of Warren County, just over 150 people live year-round without any form of long-term housing or a straightforward path to obtain it.

The individual experience of each person varies, but they all share a common struggle of survival in the streets.

View Arthur Trickett-Wile\’s spring 2024 senior project documenting the homeless community in Bowling Green, Ky and those that work to help them. https://www.arthur-trickett-wile.com/homelessness-in-bowling-green

\"\"

Lester Martin sleeps through the dawn on a bench along a Park Greenway Trail behind Kereiakes Park and Fairview Cemetery in Bowling, Ky. Lester says he likes the spot because it is secluded and affords him the occasional glimpse of nature. “It’s really peaceful—no one bothers you,” he said. “A lot of time you’ll see deer. I had a little possum who would sleep down under my bench.”
 

\"\"
 
Margie \”McGraw\” Mesker, who is homeless, trades head-scratches for kisses from Panhead McGraw, her three-year-old pit-shepherd mix, outside the Lifeskills Wellness Connection in Bowling Green. Mesker is known simply as \”McGraw\” within the local homeless community due to her long-standing delusion that she is married to country music star Tim McGraw. \”Panhead\’s sister belongs to Faith Hill,\” Mesker said. \”But that\’s God\’s plan.\”
 
\"\"
 
Bowling Green Room in the Inn director Dewayne Conner, left, prays with Lloyd Scott during an intake session at the Salvation Army Fellowship Hall on Main Avenue. Room in the Inn partners with a dozen or more local churches to provide temporary overnight warming shelters for the homeless throughout the cold season. Lloyd and Dewayne asked for God’s help in Lloyd’s battles with temptation. “I’ve been struggling, man,” he said. “I been moving toward the dark side.” He was later banned for the season after showing up at an intake intoxicated, leaving him to find a place to stay each night for himself. \”Lord, I ask that you take this burden off of Lloyd,\” Dewayne said.
 
\"\"
 
Bowling Green Room in the Inn director Dewayne Conner, left, prays with Lloyd Scott during an intake session at the Salvation Army Fellowship Hall on Main Avenue. Room in the Inn partners with a dozen or more local churches to provide temporary overnight warming shelters for the homeless throughout the cold season. Lloyd and Dewayne asked for God’s help in Lloyd’s battles with temptation. “I’ve been struggling, man,” he said. “I been moving toward the dark side.” He was later banned for the season after showing up at an intake intoxicated, leaving him to find a place to stay each night for himself. \”Lord, I ask that you take this burden off of Lloyd,\” Dewayne said.
 
\"\"
 
Bowling Green Room in the Inn director Dewayne Conner, left, prays with Lloyd Scott during an intake session at the Salvation Army Fellowship Hall on Main Avenue. Room in the Inn partners with a dozen or more local churches to provide temporary overnight warming shelters for the homeless throughout the cold season. Lloyd and Dewayne asked for God’s help in Lloyd’s battles with temptation. “I’ve been struggling, man,” he said. “I been moving toward the dark side.” He was later banned for the season after showing up at an intake intoxicated, leaving him to find a place to stay each night for himself. \”Lord, I ask that you take this burden off of Lloyd,\” Dewayne said.
 

Category: Advanced PJ, Class Work, PJ & DOC projects, Through Our Eyes
Previous Post:Life in the Garden, By Sean McInnis
Next Post:48 Minutes

about wkuvjp

Western Kentucky University Visual Journalism and Photography, a leading nationally ranked program, is not only about visual storytelling based in still and moving image acquisition, but it is also about instilling passion, inspiration, dedication and love for what you do.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

MOUNTAIN WORKSHOPS

Since 1976, the Mountain Workshops has been gathering stories of our shared history. This unprecedented visual collection of a rich past reveals the everyday life of the people and places that make our Commonwealth unique and truly, one-of-a-kind.

We believe in the power of human connection through storytelling, and we create and preserve a valuable cultural archive of Kentucky life.

CLICK

What We Do

Our Courses

Our Faculty

Scholarships

Graduates

APPLY

Copyright © 2026 · WESTERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY VJ&P · All Rights Reserved