When we moved back to Vermont in 2003, I was terrified. Without a steady job, I didn’t know exactly from where our money would come. We were always on what I believed to be the edge of poverty. But then I started to think about it. Were we truly poor?
Everywhere I look “books, radio, television” there is someone telling me how to “eliminate debt” or “build wealth.” And the majority of these programs are geared for people who have high-paying jobs, huge homes and new cars and are feeling the “burden” of too much debt. What I don”t see a lot of are books or shows dedicated to helping people live ” and live well – off $10 an hour. In order to be on a “debt diet” one needs to be able to acquire debt. I dare say that most financial experts would argue that you can”t live well off $10 an hour. Those families who make $10 an hour are impoverished and should be educated as to how to make more money. And that”s where the help ends: “Get a better job, get some debt and then I can help you.”
So what is poverty?
Is it families who try and exist on Mom’s salary of $10 an hour? Or is it not having food in the house? Or is it not having the house? Is it not having electricity? Running water? Heat?
I read a story in the newspaper once about a man who didn”t have heat and was in line at soup kitchen. He didn’t have any money because he had to pay his electric bill and for his cable TV.
Think that’s crazy? How many Americans, when asked, do you think would pause if they were asked if TV, the Internet or their cell phone was a luxury or a necessity? I bet you just did. How many times have you cut back on your budget for groceries so that you could pay the credit card, cable TV or cell phone bill?
A professional man, let’s call him “Ben,” I once had a conversation with told me that cutting back on groceries was the only way to cut back on spending because all of the other expense were fixed. The car payment had to be paid, the credit cards, the TV. All of them had to come first.
But did it ever occur to him to eliminate the car payment by buying a used car and paying cash for it? Or to cut up the card, turn off the TV or use the Internet at the public library?
But Ben was right in one regard. Food is one area where we as a nation can cut back. I had always thought of myself as being pretty frugal. My family doesn’t eat out much and I don’t buy a lot of junk food. So I did a little “receipt” searching and after recording each and everything we spent money on for about two months, I discovered that I spent a little over $1,000 per month in food costs alone. No, we didn’t eat out at restaurants, but how many times on my way to a soccer game did I buy Gatorades to go all around, plus a box of granola bars or a bag of chips? That’s an easy $10 or $15 nearly everyday.
After careful consideration of our spending habits, I was able to cut our food spending, “all of it,” down to an average of $300 a month. That’s less than $100 a week for seven people. I also found that we eat healthier on less money than we ever did before.
By eating healthier “and teaching our young and new mothers how to feed their children healthier” we will curb our need for medical attention. I am horrified by the amount of mothers, particularly teen mothers, who are talked into formula feeding their babies because someone tells them that their baby will be healthier, or will gain more weight or whatever. Not only is this untrue, but by breastfeeding a child throughout the child’s first year or more (no, not until kindergarten!), a mother can, on average, save as much as $160 month. That’s an electric bill and a phone bill! That’s also money that can go towards the other children in the family’s food budget.
Children who aren’t breastfed are more susceptible to a wide range of medical issues from food allergies to illnesses. All of which put single working mothers in precarious positions with their employers because they constantly have to take off work to take their little ones to the doctor. Another point to be made is that if doctors didn”t hold such “regular” bankers hours, mothers who work might not have to take time off to get their little ones there ” thus reducing the image that such mothers don”t care about their baby”s well-being.
Our nation”s desire to consume is overrunning a mother”s desire to care for her child.
And further, we have begun to believe that poverty is when you can”t afford a new car. Or cable TV. That’s not poverty. That’s just living. We can’t all have everything and until we realize that, we can’t have happiness.
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Green Resolutions says:
Have you seen http://www.globalrichlist.com/.
There has also been a great discussion on several blogs recently about how Americans are all well off because we have access to good educations, health depts, etc. The global perspective vs. Keeping up w/the Jonses.
On another topic, can I get your recipe for homemade bread? You left a comment on my post “Scratching Organics off the Grocery List?” and you mention that you make your own bread… I’ve been wanting to get a recipe for this and I would really appreciate if you would share!
21st March 2009 at 4:59 pm
Mish says:
Hi!
Here’s the recipe – I made it a post today! Thanks so much for commenting – and for having such a great site!
21st March 2009 at 8:50 am
How to Create Multiple Income Streams | Organically Inclined says:
[...] Ways to Make Money Right Now Are You Poor? 10 Ways to Save Money Right [...]
21st March 2009 at 1:03 pm
Daisy says:
I still remember nursing my babies and being glad I didn’t have to waste money on formula. We were secure, but on the edge of poverty, making steady but low wages. Nursing my babies made a big difference in so many ways.
21st March 2009 at 8:03 pm
Crimson Wife says:
I’ve been broke but fortunately never poor. I’ve always had a roof over my head (however modest), food on my table (even if it’s weird concoctions made from the odds-n-ends in my pantry), health insurance, heat (even if just on high enough to keep the pipes from freezing), electricity, transportation (even if it’s 1 older model economy car shared between the 2 of us), clothes on our back (even if they’re from the thrift shop), and so on.
Americans have trouble distinguishing between “needs” and “wants”.
21st March 2009 at 10:43 am
Mish says:
You’re absolutely right! Thanks so much for commenting. I, too, have been very broke, but not poor. There is a huge difference between having $20 in the checkbook and the lights on and fridge (even having a fridge, because I’ve been without one of those – back in those, living in the car days) with food – and having no heat, no roof, no food…
Let’s be careful about what poverty really is…
21st March 2009 at 11:15 am