Pubdate: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Andrew Hanon TURNING LIVES AROUND Brianna Olson doesn't hide from her past. Nor will she let it define her. "I'm not ashamed to tell my story," the 21-year-old says. "It gives me an opportunity to be upfront and truthful, to use it to help other people." Olson has seen a lot of the world's dark side in her short life. By age 12, she was experimenting with pot and booze. By 15, she was living on the streets, addicted to crystal meth. By 16, she was already struggling to get clean and turn her life into something she could be proud of. But it was an uphill battle. The thug life is a powerful undertow. "I was nearly 17 and I was hanging with some very crazy people," she says in a matter-of-fact tone. "I was seeing friends going to jail for manslaughter, second-degree murder. These were the people I considered my family." Olson had gone back to school and was on her way to graduating as class valedictorian, but she still had one foot on the street. Her solo attempts to stay clean ended in frustration. It all came crashing down in September 2004, when an ex-boyfriend's body was found on the Enoch reserve a few weeks after his friends had lost contact with him. While no one has ever been charged with 21-year-old Patrick Ouderkirk's killing, Olson is convinced he was murdered over a drug debt. The horror of Ouderkirk's death drove home the merciless brutality of her environment, and the cheapness of life on the streets. She vowed to honour him by living a meaningful life. "It was like, if I ever did crystal meth again, I'd be spitting on his grave," she says. Somewhere along the way, Olson found the iHuman Youth Society, a trail-blazing Edmonton organization that uses the arts to give troubled youth a chance to refocus their lives. Olson has always had a passion for the arts. She's a breakdancer, singer/songwriter, poet and actor, and she found an outlet through the iHuman Society that no other social program could offer. "Often, once you're finally in recovery (from addiction), it's like it's the end of the road," she says. "You're not on drugs. Great. Now what? IHuman gives youth the chance to recover and then do things that are actually meaningful. They can have a purpose." For Olson, the impact of iHuman was so profound that she went on to become a registered social worker and is now employed by the society. She's become a sought-after speaker at forums and youth workshops all over Alberta. But now Olson faces the massive task of keeping in touch with the scores of street kids who were turning their lives around in iHuman's studio at 11355 105 Ave., which was shut down by city hall earlier this month because the group's activities didn't conform to the property's zoning. The iHuman board knew this when the program moved into the building eight months ago. According to president Lorris Williams, they've never stopped looking for a permanent location, but high rents, very specific criteria (must be within easy distance of inner city) and the stigma of having high-risk youth as tenants have made the search extremely difficult. Williams dismisses the stigma issue as patent nonsense. "If you went into our studio, you'd see the youth take very proprietary care of everything there." If the society doesn't find a new home soon, the board fears that the organization is going to lose kids to the streets. Olson shakes her head sadly at the prospect. "It's so typical for disenfranchised and marginalized youth. They feel like they lose everything that has any meaning for them." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek