HOUSTON – The headline numbers from BridgeCare’s Health & Hunger pop-up are easy to list: 100 hygiene kits and 100 hot meals handed out to neighbors experiencing homelessness.
But if you ask the people who were there, the real story is what happened in the spaces between the distribution table and the next slice of pizza.
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Volunteers didn’t just pass out meals and move on. They pulled up chairs, ate alongside guests, and let conversations stretch a little longer than planned.
At one point, a guest picked up a guitar and started playing for the crowd.
The energy shifted. People laughed. A few strangers started to feel like neighbors.
“The best part wasn’t the numbers,” Yahya Ahmad, BridgeCare’s founder and CEO said. “It was watching volunteers sit down, share a meal, and actually listen to our neighbors. Someone pulled out a guitar. Strangers became friends. Dignity was the whole point.”
BridgeCare hosted the pop-up this weekend near downtown at 61 Riesner Street, behind the Houston Police Department.
The nonprofit said about 30 volunteers served more than 100 people.
“Be safe.” Ahmad said that’s what people tell him — and it’s part of the problem
When Ahmad talks about BridgeCare, he doesn’t start with a pitch deck or big promises.
He starts with what people say when they learn where he’s spending his Saturday.
“Many people that I’ve talked to… the thing that I hear the most is, ‘Be safe.’ ‘They’re dangerous,’” Ahmad said.
He doesn’t pretend there aren’t real issues — including addiction — on the street.
“Yes, drugs are prevalent in the community… We can’t turn a blind eye to that,” he said. “But every single time that I’ve gone out without fail, these are some of the kindest people that you will truly meet.”
To him, the bigger danger is what stigma does: how quickly people stop making eye contact, stop seeing a person.
“If something like this happens to us, and we’re completely out of control of it, is that how you want to be treated in that situation?” he asked.
The first instruction to volunteers: start small
BridgeCare is healthcare-focused — but Ahmad said the first lesson isn’t clinical.
“Every single time when we’re starting out an event, I tell my volunteers: give them a compliment,” he said. “‘Hey, you look beautiful today.’ ‘I love your hair.’ ‘I love your shirt.’ Because it’s the little things that get you through the darkest moments.”
It’s an approach that matches the scene at the pop-up: supplies on the table, but time and attention being handed out just as freely.
It’s also the idea Ahmad keeps coming back to — that the smallest actions, repeated, can start to change people.
What people need isn’t always what you think
BridgeCare’s pop-ups combine food with hygiene and basic health supplies. Ahmad said the health needs he sees are often rooted in things most people take for granted.
“Our motto is ‘healthcare is a right, not a privilege,’” he said.
He pointed to hand sanitizer as an example — a daily item that prevents infection, but can be out of reach when someone is being turned away.
“Something as little as hand sanitizer, that we use every single day, is just not accessible to them,” he said. “If they walk into a store, people won’t let them use the restroom just because of the way that they’re clothed.”
Another item that’s become essential at BridgeCare events: large body wipes.
“Everyone needs to take a shower,” Ahmad said. “It’s not just about looking good and being clean… it causes a lot of infections and diseases as well.”
He said the wipes are practical, because showers aren’t.
“With them, where are they finding so much water? Who’s going to let them take a shower?” he said, describing long lines at shelters and limited access. “One body wipe… you can completely clean yourself off.”
He said the kits they hand out can last about two weeks, and his goal is to eventually serve people more often — but that depends on funding.
What happens after the pop-up ends
BridgeCare’s events have a start time and end time. The need doesn’t.
Ahmad said follow-up looks like building relationships in person — and then doing the practical work of making sure people know when the next event is.
Some guests have phones, he said. Others keep up through social media or public library access.
“I hand out flyers personally,” Ahmad said. “I go in person because I want to meet these people… I want them to know that I’m here to help them, and also that I’m a friend.”
And sometimes, follow-up looks like something simple: talking about music.
“There were some people playing the guitar out there,” he said. “We were just talking about music… little conversations like that, but it’s so fun.”
The real goal: BridgeCare as a catalyst
Ahmad is quick to say what BridgeCare does isn’t complicated.
“It is very simple work,” he said.
But he believes it’s meaningful — especially because the volunteer base is largely made up of pre-health students who are on their way to becoming doctors, dentists, nurses and physician assistants.
His hope is that BridgeCare becomes a turning point in how they see the people they’ll one day treat.
“Do we just sign off on our degree because we’re going to be making a lot of money?” Ahmad said. “If you don’t have true passion to make a difference, will you really feel fulfilled inside?”
In other words: the kits and meals matter — but they’re also the doorway.
BridgeCare, Ahmad emphasized, is meant to be a catalyst.
“BridgeCare can only do so much,” he said. “But we’re trying to reform people’s ways of thinking so that I want physicians to open up something bigger than BridgeCare… beat whatever we’re doing… as long as we’re making a difference where it matters.”
“Start with the littlest of things”
When asked what he’d say to Houston leaders — and really, to anyone listening — Ahmad didn’t begin with a demand. He began with a mirror.
He described the everyday moments: pulling up to a red light, seeing someone approach, looking away to avoid eye contact, locking the doors.
“That’s where you start,” he said. “Even if it’s a water bottle.”
Ahmad said people don’t have to launch a nonprofit to make a difference.
“I’m not gonna sit here and tell you just to start BridgeCare,” he said. “What I want you to do is just start even talking to them, compliment them, something just that little can make someone’s whole week.”
What BridgeCare is building
BridgeCare is student-led, and the organization said it is expanding its chapter network across Texas. It currently has active chapters at the University of Houston and Carnegie Vanguard High School, with new chapters opening at UT Austin and Texas A&M University.
For Ahmad, that growth only matters if it keeps the heart of what happened at the pop-up: the choice to stay, sit, listen — and treat people like people.
Because sometimes the first sign of change in a city isn’t a big announcement.
Sometimes it’s a chair pulled up to a table, a slice of pizza shared, and a guitar being passed from one set of hands to another.
For more information, visit www.JoinBridgeCare.org or follow them on social media.