No poor does not necessarily equal violence. |
+1 The Appalachian Trail people have everyone beat. |
I grew up in a smallish town but there was a hospital system and a directional state U so there was some level of affluence. But it was your typical midwestern town with a lot of lower class people too...just one high school for the town so I went to school with the children of MDs and PhDs and mill workers and manual laborers and gas station workers and one thing I noticed when I went to my “poorer” friends houses is how they interacted with each other. Parents screaming at kids. Lots of hitting and swearing. Parents ALWAYS fighting. Whereas at my house and more affluent households it was more “Susie, could you please put the dishes away?” Poor homes: “SUSIE PUT THE GOD DAMN DISHES AWAY BEFORE I SMACK YOU INTO NEXT WEEK” |
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Conversation between a rich person and a poor person. Let's say the poor person is possibly the rich person's nanny:
Rich person: "Why didn't you go to the doctor about that health issue you had a couple years ago?" Poor person: "Because before I started working for you, I didn't have the money to put gas in my car so I could drive to the doctor." |
To be fair , this is applicable to like the majority of UMC and middle class whites who are more likelt to have been beneficiaries of such mechanisms |
| There's also the experience of poor immigrant kids--translating for your parents, for example. |
Sorry but lab-tested quality, often expensive, skincare products do work. |
There is an enormous difference in the way rich people and poor people talk to their children. |
+1. I'm the PP with the poor nanny. My parents never hit me. I was routinely told I could do/be whatever I wanted and always was told how much I was loved. DH grew up in the third world and was regularly beaten; I don't think his parents were particularly encouraging to him and they never said I love you. |
Omg. I had forgotten about powdered milk. |
We have one bathroom. No big deal. |
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This is a sad part about losing community. I don't why it happens that families in your situation have no support network. Where is the village? |
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Man! This actually should be a life philosophy. |