Stacy

Stacy

Artist: Michael Lemen

Location: Orange County Rescue Mission

Stacy’s life moved through a season many would find unbearable—years of instability, domestic violence, and a time when she admits, “I was done with life”—yet it becomes compelling because she chose, slowly and stubbornly, to stay and keep fighting for her children. She came to the OC Rescue Mission to make sure her daughter was looked after and, almost unexpectedly, found faith, therapy, and a community that helped shift the day-to-day: a family member experienced healing, her children found steady footing and began serving at the mission, and Stacy started doing meaningful work assisting others while relearning how to care for herself. The turning points were subtle and cumulative—surrendering control, accepting help, and learning to trust God and new routines—allowing shame and guilt to give way to small, steady gains in confidence and peace. The lessons she carries are plain and hard-won: love matters more than material success, healing is gradual and often awkward, and letting others support you can open the door to becoming the person you were trying so hard to be.

Robert (@ the HUB)

Robert

Artist: Jason Leith

Location: The HUB Resource Center in Orange, CA

Robert is a deaf man with a gentle spirit. Our time was mostly quiet because I did not know if he could hear me or read my lips. Neither could I understand what he was saying when he was using spoken words. So I wrote down some questions for him in the midst of making his portrait.

What’s your dream? “to be reunited with his wife, Jacqueline.” He proceeded to share how she is very sick and he’s hoping she recovers, but seemed to be under a cloud about the situation.

What is your passion? “basketball

As he was loading up his bike to leave, Robert invited me to go play ultimate frisbee with him and his friends.

Carolyne

Carolyne

Artist: Jason Leith

Location: Orange County Rescue Mission

Carolyne is an exuberant servant. When Carolyne was 12, her single-parent mother went into an alcohol recovery program. They drifted in and out of having a roof over their heads. Her servant-heartedness and enthusiasm for life was taken advantage of at 20 years old when she landed in a manipulative group promising to help her restart her life. Despite everything, she found ways to grow within the group, becoming more outgoing and sharing Jesus more directly with people. Fortunately due to her strong connection with God’s voice, she made it out in a short time. Carolyne was faced with starting over again. She eventually found a healthy place to build a foundation at the Double R Ranch. She is eager to grow her passion to serve, expressing how “Each one of us has a unique purpose in what we can take care of. It’s up to us to take care of it.” Carolyne’s first portrait sketch reflects how she has encountered darkness through broken relationships and spiritual oppression. But her final portrait reflects the joy and kindness people experience of her today.

Cheyenne

Cheyenne

Artist: Jason Leith

Location: Orange County Rescue Mission

Cheyenne is a buoyant journeyer. Born in New Jersey, she gave her life to Christ at 16 and became ready for a change away from home. She jumped at an opportunity to start all over and come to California and live for Jesus. The opportunity ended up being an abusive scheme, with fifteen girls living in a two-bedroom apartment, coerced to ask for money every day. Proverbs 1 encourages the faithful to seek wisdom and discernment. This scripture, along with advice from a friend helped her quickly depart from the group. She says, “It changed me for the good and built my character.” She hopes to completely let go of the life she had in New Jersey. Just like the faithful mentioned in the book of Hebrews, she is not looking back, but “longing for a better country—a heavenly one.” (Heb. 11:15)

Jose

Artist: Michael Lemen

Location: Orange County Rescue Mission

Jose spent fifteen years trapped in addiction, and his story matters because it’s not a sudden rescue so much as a steady, deliberate decision to become present for his children and himself. He remembers sleeping on the streets, feeling hollow while his life fell apart, until one day—tired  and honest—he told himself, “I’m done,” and walked into a program at the Double R Ranch that gave him structure, work skills, and a place to rebuild. Recovery didn’t erase the shame or the cravings overnight; it forced him to confront loneliness, repair relationships with brothers who’d kept faith in him, and learn to rely on a God he once ignored. Along the way he found practical hope—NA meetings, vocational training, steps toward a CNA certificate—and quieter shifts: gratitude in small routines, the courage to face temptation, and the humility to ask for help. The lesson Jose offers is simple and resolute: change is challenging and slow, but choosing accountability, community, and purpose can turn survival into a life you’re willing to show your kids.

Julian

Julian

Artist: Michael Lemen

Location: Orange County Rescue Mission

Julian sat at the Double R Ranch with a coffee cup warming his hands, but beneath that calm was a life that had waded through muddy water—a story worth listening to because it shows the path to recovery is unclear at times and deeply human. A misunderstood note once cost him thirty days out of the program and forced a sudden restart; rather than giving up, he leaned on a sister in Dana Point, and parents in Arrowhead—where his father turned simple projects into meaningful moments of reconnection. Music—especially the improvisational language of drumming inspired by Buddy Rich and Tony Williams—became his practice in patience: learning to hear others, adapt in the moment, and accept that progress comes in fits and starts. Back at the ranch he committed to one-on-one therapy, group sessions, and Bible study, confronting old patterns and learning to stay present when discomfort arose. The turning point wasn’t a major achievement but a steady decision to trade isolation for consistent community support, showing that starting over can be an act of honesty rather than failure. Julian’s story reminds us that change develops through small, repeated choices to move forward, ask for help, and keep playing the beat even when the rhythm falters.

Jayden

Jayden’s story begins in the tempered grit of small moments—teaching himself skills he missed growing up

Continue reading

Toni

Toni

Artist: Jason Leith

Location: Faith City Mission, Amarillo, TX

Toni always remembers your name. And then she begins praying for you. Her ministry is to pray for people and has seen many healed and helped from her prayers. She lives with schizophrenia and her children dropped her in front of Faith City after she got out of a mental hospital. She said her dad was “always helping somebody.” He died when she was only 24 yet he was the one who taught her virtue. Toni’s message to the world is written into her portrait “Give people grace. Love people more often. Pray for those who hurt you.” When I asked about her passion she said, “caring for the homeless.” Even with nothing, Toni’s attention is on others who may also need a hand.

The entire process of Toni’s portrait is up on YouTube from the 24-hr Bench broadcast. Watch me Start Toni’s portrait – Start at 3:50:00

Watch me Finish Toni’s portrait here

Jezzelle

Jezzelle

Artist: Jason Leith

Location: Faith City Mission, Texas

At four-years-old Jezzelle was exposed to things not even teens should see. Her journey brought her to become involved in gangs, incarcerated, and suicidal. She says however that “the Lord sustained me through it all.” It was in 2021 that she rededicated her life to Christ. “I’m learning I don’t have to live as an orphan.” She explained. “I’m like the prodigal I’m returning my father. His arms are wide open. I was searching for love in all the wrong places, wanting safety and security” She told me how Christ  healed her of all addiction, suicidal tendencies, lupus, and schizophrenia! Her dream would be help others recover too. 

Tanya

Tanya

Artist: Ginger Anderson

Location: The HUB Resource Center

Tanya is one of the most determined and hopeful women I have ever met. She has been through a lot in her life that to most would be grounds to give up, but instead Tanya chooses to give. Give to her family and to others. As I was talking to her she was smiling at everyone who passed, helping others get the food they needed and reminiscing with her significant other of 25 years. She is determined to see hope and she is a part of hope in others’ lives.”

Karina

Karina

Artist: Michael Lemen

Location: OC Rescue Mission

Karina is a caregiver with a heart of gold. Her journey began in assisted living and later as an in-home support worker for a friend recovering from injury. At the Orange County Rescue Mission’s Village of Hope, she discovered her gift helping children with autism, patiently guiding them to build new skills and encouraging parents through her consistent care.

Now, Karina has found a new calling at the Double R Ranch, where she nurtures the animals with the same compassion she once gave her students. With eagerness, she has thrown herself into learning the intricacies of animal care. “I’m born and raised in Orange County, so to me, this is all new,” she shares. Yet she now confidently distinguishes different kinds of hay, explaining “Orchard is fatter…Bermuda is thinner…and Alfalfa has a lot of nutrition with what I like to call, flowers and buds.” From supporting vulnerable people to tending the ranch, Karina’s story is one of steady growth, compassion, and an ever-expanding capacity to care.