Contact Here's the updated code with your green accent color on the button: ```html Your Name Email Address Subject Select a topic... General Inquiry Partnership Contribute to IOM Guest Inquiry Press Support / Donate Other Message Send Message Anchor Points Drifting & We Don't Even Know It We think we're paying attention. I thought I was focused. I thought I knew exactly what I was doing. But sometimes we've got blinders on. Drift is real, not just in grocery orders, but in work, in conversations, in time with the people we love. Even in time with God. By Devin Almonte • 1 min read News New York Is Spending a Household Income Per Homeless Person. NYC is spending nearly as much per person experiencing homelessness as the average household earns in a year. The services are real. The intentions are clear. But the outcomes are harder to measure. At some point, the question shifts from how much we’re doing to whether it’s actually working. By Devin Almonte • 3 min read All Articles “Adopt Don’t Shop” Has a Problem No One Talks About Trying to adopt a dog shouldn’t feel like applying for a mortgage. But for many families, it does. As “adopt don’t shop” became a cultural mantra, something else quietly happened: the process meant to protect animals began pushing away the very people willing to give them a home. By Devin Almonte • 3 min read In A Minute What Actually Helps? More money. More effort. And still, not the change you’d expect. So what actually works? By Devin Almonte • 1 min read The InSight Out Show When $81,000 Isn’t Enough: The Hard Question Behind Homelessness New York City is spending about $81,000 per homeless person each year, yet the number of people on the streets is still rising. What actually helps? In policy and in everyday life, doing more isn’t always the same as doing what’s needed and figuring out the difference takes wisdom. By Devin Almonte • 1 min read Anchor Points Not All Grace Is The Same Saving grace is everything, but it’s not the only way God is good. Sitting at the beach, surrounded by people living their lives, it becomes clear: there’s a kind of goodness woven into the world that reaches everyone. It’s easy to miss unless we slow down long enough to notice. By Devin Almonte • 1 min read
Anchor Points Drifting & We Don't Even Know It We think we're paying attention. I thought I was focused. I thought I knew exactly what I was doing. But sometimes we've got blinders on. Drift is real, not just in grocery orders, but in work, in conversations, in time with the people we love. Even in time with God. By Devin Almonte • 1 min read
News New York Is Spending a Household Income Per Homeless Person. NYC is spending nearly as much per person experiencing homelessness as the average household earns in a year. The services are real. The intentions are clear. But the outcomes are harder to measure. At some point, the question shifts from how much we’re doing to whether it’s actually working. By Devin Almonte • 3 min read
All Articles “Adopt Don’t Shop” Has a Problem No One Talks About Trying to adopt a dog shouldn’t feel like applying for a mortgage. But for many families, it does. As “adopt don’t shop” became a cultural mantra, something else quietly happened: the process meant to protect animals began pushing away the very people willing to give them a home. By Devin Almonte • 3 min read
In A Minute What Actually Helps? More money. More effort. And still, not the change you’d expect. So what actually works? By Devin Almonte • 1 min read
The InSight Out Show When $81,000 Isn’t Enough: The Hard Question Behind Homelessness New York City is spending about $81,000 per homeless person each year, yet the number of people on the streets is still rising. What actually helps? In policy and in everyday life, doing more isn’t always the same as doing what’s needed and figuring out the difference takes wisdom. By Devin Almonte • 1 min read
Anchor Points Not All Grace Is The Same Saving grace is everything, but it’s not the only way God is good. Sitting at the beach, surrounded by people living their lives, it becomes clear: there’s a kind of goodness woven into the world that reaches everyone. It’s easy to miss unless we slow down long enough to notice. By Devin Almonte • 1 min read