I grew up poor. My father was literally a sharecropper's son, & my mother came from hardy German working-class stock. My father split when I was four, or was more accurately made to leave, as he was a drunk & my mother had to get herself & her children away from him. I suppose he would've stuck around if she had wanted him to.
Anyway, being a child & not being terribly self-aware (it occurs to me that being self-aware might ruin childhood) I couldn't have told you that we were poor. I knew a couple of facts but didn't seem to want to connect them to some overarching idea:
1) We lived in apartments, while most of my schoolmates lived in houses.
2) My schoolmates had more toys - they had more things, in general - than we did.
One big example is that my schoolmates - & I separate my schoolmates from my friends, since I was mostly friends in the "hanging out & playing together" sense with people who lived in the apartment complexes where I lived- my schoolmates generally had their parents drive them around. My mother didn't drive - we didn't own a car - & though occasionally my older siblings took us places, they had no real sense of filial obligation & usually did so begrudgingly.
But it didn't seem weird to me because my mother didn't drive. It was never, "We can't afford a car." It was, "If Mom drove, we'd have a car."
My mother, however, has always felt deeply ashamed by her low economic status - although, it must be noted, certainly not so ashamed that she might work really hard to pull herself out of it - she never thought about going to school to learn a trade. She went to work, but the jobs she chose - working at a convenience store or drug store, or a fast food restaurant - were jobs that didn't necessarily require more than the ability to count & a pleasant demeanor.
I have to point out in this long-winded anecdote that I am not trying to disrespect or criticize my mother for these choices, if indeed they were choices - she had six children to support - maybe one or two had left by the time of the divorce, but still, at least three of us were under twelve. I have never had to do anything like that. My mother has always been a creature controlled by shame & fear, so the strength it took for her to work to support her family is something I don't think I possess.
As I've been saying, I was completely unaware of our socioeconomic status, & blissfully so. It meant that insults from the middle class kids at school went right over my head. I remember once a teacher asked me if I lived in the apartments close to the school, & when I said yes, she said, "Oh, dear." So they must've looked like an awful place to live - but at the time I was puzzled by her reaction.
Until. This had to be a few months later. My mother just turned to me & said, "Are you ashamed that we're so poor?"
& I wasn't. Because I didn't know we were poor. Only now I did. & suddenly I was.
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