SHE FOUND HER SON THROUGH MIRACLES AND SOCIAL MEDIA
Few homeless people drift into Dolan Springs, Ariz., because there’s not much of a town to drift into. Little more than a gas station,
a Family Dollar and a grocery store, it’s a splash of half-civilization in the middle of the desert, where 36 percent of residents live below the poverty line. So when Patience Matthieu, a thin woman of 31 years, saw a new homeless person in March, asking for food, she stopped and watched him. He looked just like her cousin, if that cousin had some teeth knocked out. What was he doing all the way out here?
Matthieu could tell something wasn’t right with him. He said
he wanted to tend lawns, but this was a desert town. He said he was living in a tunnel, but where? So she decided to help. She brought him clothing, got him some canned food, and offered to split her earnings made from selling a few odds and ends at a swap meet. As he grew to trust her, she asked him how she could contact him, and, hesitatingly, he gave her his full name. She went home and, curious, punched it into Google: Christopher Aaron Moreland.
The results
introduced Matthieu to the pained digital world of families searching for relatives, many of whom are severely mentally ill...READ MORE