Skip to content

Letter to Seattle: Little Things Matter

A small gesture has big meaning for uplift Northwest client

By Seattle Mag April 26, 2023

Devin Pullium

This article originally appeared in the March/April 2023 issue of Seattle magazine.

Letter to Seattle highlights the good deeds and positive experiences in our region. This is a letter from Devin Pullium to Uplift Northwest, a Seattle nonprofit that provides job opportunities and job-preparation services to people experiencing poverty and homelessness.

I’ve been with Uplift Northwest since 2016 as a day laborer. I love working with Uplift Northwest and recently had a memorable experience with the staff that deeply impacted me.

In November, I was displaced from my apartment and needed a secure space where I could store personal documents and items that I couldn’t afford to lose while figuring out my housing situation. These were personal items like my Social Security card, tax documents, work logs, and more. All these items are important to me in securing employment and housing in the future, so I needed them to be in a safe place.

Uplift Northwest provides lockers for us, and while it may seem like a small thing, items are often stolen or just misplaced when you’re experiencing homelessness, so this is an important service.

Upon my arrival to get secure documents from my locker one day, I was met by a tenant in the building who wasn’t familiar with me and was skeptical to allow me access. The Uplift Northwest team was made aware of the challenges I was having, and I could not believe how the team went above and beyond to help me that day. The entire team came to my aid and personally assisted me with getting everything taken care of so I could access what I needed without interference.

It meant so much to me because, in that moment, I needed those documents to remain employed. The team could have brushed me off and not made it a problem of their concern. It wasn’t just one person — the entire team came in and made sure I was taken care of. Without all the care and concern for what I was dealing with I would have found myself unemployed that day because I needed to provide those documents to my employer.

Uplift does more than just provide lockers. Everyone there really cares about what we experience. They make sure people have positive interactions every day. It’s not just about the services provided — those people truly care about our real lives and the different issues we face when trying to get back on our feet.

I’m so grateful.

Devin Pullium

Follow Us

Seattle Gift Guide: Comfort, Style, and Everyday Essentials

Seattle Gift Guide: Comfort, Style, and Everyday Essentials

Open them today, enjoy for months—and years—to come.

A few gift ideas for the season, mixing local favorites with smart, useful finds. Easy pieces to wear, sweet things to share, and a couple of upgrades for the home. Nothing fussy, just solid picks that make life a little nicer.     Now the birds have a smart home too. The chic, camera-integrated Peep…

Publisher's Notebook: A Well Designed Life

Publisher’s Notebook: A Well Designed Life

Great design is never just about use.

Is life better when the things around us are beautiful? Beauty,  when we experience it, actually slows us down in the best possible way. It commands us to notice. A beautifully designed thing doesn’t just function—it holds within it the accrued talents of its maker, the culture of its time, and the promise that life…

Seattle Podcast: The Truth About College Admission with Adam Miller

Seattle Podcast: The Truth About College Admission with Adam Miller

An Insider's Guide on Getting into College
Sponsored

An Insider’s Guide on Getting into College

UPrep’s Director of College Counseling offers his take on the current admission landscape.

During his 20 years directing college counseling at UPrep, a 6–12 private school in Seattle’s Wedgwood neighborhood, Kelly Herrington has supported more than 1,500 students in their college search. UPrep graduates have matriculated to nearly 400 different colleges and universities in 44 states and 10 countries. Below Kelly shares three observations on the current college…