Imagine this. An eight-year old girl returns home from school to her mum. Her bag is laden with homework, the short walk is a hot and sweltering one.
Her mum – who is six months pregnant – joyously awaits the return of her daughter.
They jump into the family car.
But this is where things turn unusual. This is where the scene differs from what plays out across hundreds of thousands of homes across Australia.
Because next, the eight-year-old girl spreads the car’s windows with towels to give herself some privacy while she does her maths and spelling.
This is her home.
This mother and daughter live in a car in the suburbs of Perth and have done so since the beginning of January.
The Sunday Times reported yesterday on the 28-year-old mother and daughter who have made a 1996 Holden Commodore their home.
During the week, they park the car near a children’s playground close to the eight-year-old girl’s primary school.
The small family lost their home when their landlord sold the property they were living in.
Her mother previously worked as a healthcare professional but suffers a debilitating neurological illness that meant she couldn’t continue to work and was unable to rent another home.
She told The Sunday Times that she moved into a relative’s house after she lost hers, but had a falling out with the relative after the man she became pregnant to left her.
It’s a common tale – an unexpected pregnancy, a couple breaking up, a family falling out – but surely it shouldn’t end up with a pregnant woman and a little girl living in a major car in a major Australian city?
The Sunday Times reports that: