...
For most of my life, I've tried to hide where I came from. I
see the type of hate and derision thrown toward people who are thought of as
“poor” and I did everything in my power to pretend that wasn't me.
Growing up, people often tossed around insults to those on
welfare, and I'd try to pretend it wasn't me they were making fun of. Early on
in life, I learned to grit my teeth, look away and try to block out the
cruelty. I know that the kids in my class were merely repeating the words their
parents had said at home, that they logically had no idea what it was like for
my family, but still... Every time someone made a jab about the lazy leeches
living off of government assistance, they were talking about me. When people
say, “Can't feed them, don't breed them,” they're talking about me. In my head,
I was something to be despised simply because I was born into the family I was.
I didn't ask for any of it.
I'm tired of hiding. I'm tired of being ashamed of a
situation that I had no control over. I'm tired of friends posting memes
bashing the poor, including the children of the poor, while they perpetuate the
misconception that people like my family are lazy, good-for-nothing welfare
queens.
Because they're not.
My family didn't just fall on hard times – their entire life
has been filled with one ridiculous tragedy after another. While we hadn't
always been poor, the problems my family encountered started early in my life.
My dad was a Vietnam war veteran and worked hard until the day he died. But he
died very young and left my mom a widow at the age of 30. She had no warning he
would die on her, and when he passed, he left her with two daughters to care
for. I was only three and a half at the time. She did everything she could for
us, she worked very hard my entire life, but her health problems left her
disabled and without a regular source of income at a young age.
Yet, she resisted filing for disability benefits for many
years. It wasn't an easy choice for her, not something she took lightly. It
took years of coaxing from family members to finally get her to apply.
When I say we were poor, I don't mean we didn't get name
brand clothes or drove a used car. Oh no, we often went without water, and for
most of my childhood, we didn't have heat. Our house was falling down around us
because my mom couldn't afford the repairs needed to maintain it. We had holes
in the floor big enough for me to fall through, and a well with a pump that
constantly failed. Because we had no heat, our pipes would freeze in the winter
meaning no water then too. Sure, it could have been worse, even for us. At
least we had a roof over our heads – even if it was threatening to fall down on
top of us.
But then things got worse.
A few years ago, my family lost everything when their house
burned to the ground. Because of the issues with the house, my mom couldn't
afford the insurance premiums, so when it was destroyed, they were left
homeless. Had it not been for the kindness of strangers, I don't know what
they'd have done.
To this very day, my mom, brother, and stepfather continue
to live in the small, cramped RV that was gifted to them after they lost their
house. It has no running water and no way to cook food other than a hot plate
and a microwave – most nights, my mom eats nothing but canned green beans with
ham seasoning. Despite it all, they're grateful to have a roof over their
heads.
I'm not in a place where I can help them. I'm barely getting
by on my own and living thousands of miles away. All I've ever wanted to do was
help pull them out of poverty. I was the golden child, the first person in my
family to graduate high school, much less college and then graduate school. I
earned degrees in subjects I thought would be practical, that would help me
earn the sort of income to allow me to help them. It wasn't what I enjoyed
studying, but it wasn't about me. I needed a career that allowed me to make
enough money to take care of them.
And I've failed.
Every time one of my friends posts about how lazy and
horrible the poor are, I still feel like they're talking about me. Like they're
talking about my family. I grit my teeth and try to remind myself that they're
not doing it on purpose and don't really mean me, but it still hurts. You see,
my mom is a great person. Truly, she is. She's always volunteered for school
events and around the community. She's given to charity even when she had very
little to give. She raised me to be a strong, independent woman who knows that
I'm not entitled to anything and that life is unfair sometimes. I've learned
the value of a dollar, and you will never see me spending a hundred dollars on
a purse or a pair of shoes, no matter how much money I make, because I realize
what truly matters in this world. I know what it's like to go without basic necessities,
and because of that, I never waste water or throw out perfectly good food. All
thanks to my my past. All thanks to my mom.
So yes, it hurts me to see others – especially people I
consider to be friends – bashing the poor. Bashing people like my mom. Sure,
you might say, she's the outlier, an anomaly in an otherwise lazy group. But
no, my friends, she's not. How do I know this? Because I've lived it. I've been
deep into the bowels of poverty and lived to tell the tale. I've met people who
may surprise you, I've heard their stories, I've lived their stories.
And guess what? Not all of these people are there because
they're lazy. Bad things do sometimes happen to good people. But that's a fact
we like to forget because it's less scary to imagine that these folks deserve
everything they've had happen to them. It's comforting to forget that sometimes
we lose jobs, our husbands die, or we're struck with a debilitating disability
and our six months of savings can only go so far when faced with a catastrophe
like that.
Believe it or not, being on welfare isn't fun. It's not a
vacation. It's not easy living month to month, worrying about whether or not
you'll be able to eat next week. It's no picnic in the park, trust me. Don't
believe me? Try washing your hair in a bucket of cold water and tell me how you
like it. Because I've been there. My family is still there as we speak, and
they're not enjoying life.
While you're at it, why not spend a Midwestern winter
without heat. Try to get to work with a car that doesn't start when the
temperature drops below a certain point. Try saving up for emergencies when you
make less than $300 a month and your rent is almost twice that. Try paying for
childcare while working a minimum wage job and see that you're pretty much
giving your babysitter your entire paycheck.
And to top it all of, try dealing with the people who
think you're lazy, that you have it easy, and make demeaning comments about
every little thing you do.
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