Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are poor.
We didn't used to be. We are both educated, from educated families, etc. Three years ago we had a hhi of 160K. Not a ton in this area, but with three kids and a reasonable mortgage, we were doing fine. Saving, living within our means, enjoying the occasional date night. Fast forward three years and DH is out of work and can't get in the door anywhere (pricey MBA and 15+ years experience doesn't seem to matter when companies aren't hiring). I was laid off and am now making $10 per hour at a retail shop while trying to run a business from home. Food stamps are on the table, we have no health insurance (still looking for something reasonable for a family of 5 when our monthly income is 1600 per month), and we are desperately trying to get assistance with our mortgage so we don't loose the house.
Never thought I'd be here. But here we are. And FYI to those who will ask why we have internet access - we don't have cells or TV, but it's pretty hard conduct a job search without email and internet. So please don't bust my chops on that.
If you aren't in same boat - hug your kids and count your blessings.
Where are you living at? I know that in MoCo, if you're on food stamps then your kids will definitely qualify for medicaid, you and your DH most likely will too. There's also programs through Health and Human Services that may be able to help you with your mortgage and utility bills. The bad thing is that it takes forever to process the application so you'll want to look into it asap.
Anonymous wrote:We are poor.
We didn't used to be. We are both educated, from educated families, etc. Three years ago we had a hhi of 160K. Not a ton in this area, but with three kids and a reasonable mortgage, we were doing fine. Saving, living within our means, enjoying the occasional date night. Fast forward three years and DH is out of work and can't get in the door anywhere (pricey MBA and 15+ years experience doesn't seem to matter when companies aren't hiring). I was laid off and am now making $10 per hour at a retail shop while trying to run a business from home. Food stamps are on the table, we have no health insurance (still looking for something reasonable for a family of 5 when our monthly income is 1600 per month), and we are desperately trying to get assistance with our mortgage so we don't loose the house.
Never thought I'd be here. But here we are. And FYI to those who will ask why we have internet access - we don't have cells or TV, but it's pretty hard conduct a job search without email and internet. So please don't bust my chops on that.
If you aren't in same boat - hug your kids and count your blessings.
Anonymous wrote:
Forget it, you don't see what I mean. I don't think of people studying for PhD's as poor. Currently low income, sure. When I think poor I think begging on the street, sleeping in a shelter, etc. Semantics to some, I guess.
I know what you mean, PP. I teach ESOL and most of my students and their families are poor - i.e. sharing a house with 2-3 families, not having a home phone, working at McDonald's. Hard workers, yes, but mostly uneducated and it will be hard for them to ever be anything other than poor. The PhD poster is probably "temporarily" poor - I assume that after she and her husband get their PhDs, they will make more money and will someday by a house or condo and will be able to go out to eat. That said, i don't think any of my students are on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're dirt poor for the area. DH and I are both PhD students living on stipends. I spend a lot of time on the internet because I need it for school. Our kid goes to Arlington Science Focus (it's a wonderful public school... I highly recommend it!). We live in a tiny, tiny apartment and cook every night. We never go out to eat.
We schedule our school stuff around her class schedule so that we don't have to pay for after-school care.
12:30 here - ok, you're poor, I guess - but people that I think of as poor aren't PhD students. They're lucky if they graduated from high school. Does anyone else see what I mean here?
But that's stereotyping. Poverty is $11,600 for a single person, $21,000 for family. That being said, in DC I would argue the poverty level is much higher than that probably (median income is $58,000 in DC compared to national $40,000). Poverty in rural Kansas is different than poverty in NYC or DC. Not everyone in povety is uneducated.
Of course not everyone in poverty is uneducated. That's not what I meant. But when I think of true poverty, I think of people working three jobs to keep food on the table and keep their family warm, etc, not studying for a PhD. Not that I think the PhD poster isn't struggling with money. Not sure why no one is seeing what I mean by that.
Maybe because you out and out said *Poor People are lucky to have graduated from HS*. I found your meaning to be pretty clear.
Forget it, you don't see what I mean. I don't think of people studying for PhD's as poor. Currently low income, sure. When I think poor I think begging on the street, sleeping in a shelter, etc. Semantics to some, I guess.

Anonymous wrote:begging on the street, sleeping in a shelter, etc
those are destitute
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're dirt poor for the area. DH and I are both PhD students living on stipends. I spend a lot of time on the internet because I need it for school. Our kid goes to Arlington Science Focus (it's a wonderful public school... I highly recommend it!). We live in a tiny, tiny apartment and cook every night. We never go out to eat.
We schedule our school stuff around her class schedule so that we don't have to pay for after-school care.
12:30 here - ok, you're poor, I guess - but people that I think of as poor aren't PhD students. They're lucky if they graduated from high school. Does anyone else see what I mean here?
But that's stereotyping. Poverty is $11,600 for a single person, $21,000 for family. That being said, in DC I would argue the poverty level is much higher than that probably (median income is $58,000 in DC compared to national $40,000). Poverty in rural Kansas is different than poverty in NYC or DC. Not everyone in poverty is uneducated.
Of course not everyone in poverty is uneducated. That's not what I meant. But when I think of true poverty, I think of people working three jobs to keep food on the table and keep their family warm, etc, not studying for a PhD. Not that I think the PhD poster isn't struggling with money. Not sure why no one is seeing what I mean by that.
Maybe because you out and out said *Poor People are lucky to have graduated from HS*. I found your meaning to be pretty clear.
Anonymous wrote:We're a military family and I'm a SAHM, so probably. My husband is enlisted. Granted, the benefits (housing, health care, etc) equate to more income, but still probably "poor" by NoVA standards. We do all right. I had a job making a little over 80/year but had to quit because of the difficulty of finding daycare for our SN son.
& we don't mind paying for the Internet, but we also don't have a home phone or any sort of television, if that makes 2348 feel better.