"a hard workout" hoping to eat hummus? Wow, what a privileged poor person. |
This is all fine and good, but part of being and empathetic person is understanding what someone needs at that moment. Do you think the OP needs hummus recipes or tips about cooking in bulk at that particular moment in time? Read the room, y'all |
Ponies like sand. Lesson learned. Stop taking your adult problems out on your child. If you give your expensive (hummus isn't that expensive) "adult" snack to your child, deal with the consequences. Kids do dumb stuff. Next time, give her a .50 yogurt. |
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I'm poorer than you
- Sent from my iPhone in the DC region during 3.9% unemployment |
Oh good, then someone can call CPS on her for leaving her child unattended while she did yoga, and her ex can use that against her in her divorce proceedings to get custody. Smart! |
I think you misread pp’s post. |
No, I did not. |
Then I have no idea what your response was supposed to mean. Pp was pointing out the double standard that goes on here, that if OP were a typical privileged person posted about how her kid had ruined the hummus she’d planned to eat after a hard workout, people would have just sympathized. You get the same complaint from someone whose context is that she doesn’t have the money for more hummus, which should be a more sympathetic story, and people judge the hell out of her for it. |
You know we wouldn't have sympathized -- we would have told her that hummus is 400 calories a cup and not the thing to be eating after a workout! |
Who eats an entire cup of hummus? |
I often eat hummus after a workout. What IS the thing to be eating after a workout, in your opinion? |
LOL, so true. Nobody is immune from judgement here. I do think for the most part people were sympathetic to the OP except for a few bad eggs. Even the people posting recipes for vats of hummus were trying to be sympathetic in their own way. |
The problem was posters judging others giving OP advice on how to make her situation a little better. |
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OP, not sure if you are still reading, but I am truly sorry for what you're going through. That sounds very, very frustrating and I can see why you got so upset.
I have also been on a poor (my paychecks literally only covered my bills with nothing left over for food or anything), and I am thirding or whatever the suggestions to shop at Aldi. If you go to an Aldi in a decent area, it is just as nice as other grocery stores, and caries organic and gluten free stuff, as well as rotating/seasonal items (beach towels, veggie spiralizer, etc). The food is very nice quality. You can also sign up to get a weekly box from Hungry Harvest. They do reclaimed produce, so stuff that is still perfectly good to eat but grew too big/too small, farmer grew too much etc. They are working to eliminate food waste. You can get a box of fruits and veggies for $15 each week. Here is a cookbook put out by a food scientist on how to eat well on a food stamp budget: https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2014/08/01/337141837/cheap-eats-cookbook-shows-how-to-eat-well-on-a-food-stamp-budget Also, although people are mocking the weird ass job suggestion, it's not a bad idea when an extra $20 can be the difference between being able to afford food or medicine or not. There are things you can do from home like online writing or transcription that don't pay a lot but can be just enough to make a difference. |
OH MY GOD JUST STOP |