Coin - originally published by associatedcontent.com
By Terri Rimmer
Growing up in a
middle-class family in the 70s we never wanted for anything. There
was steak on the grill every Saturday night, parties in the basement,
big meals at holidays, breakfast on the electric griddle at the
kitchen table, plenty of Halloween candy and we never went hungry.
Mom always shopped heartily and Dad always brought us treats and took
us to ice cream and pizza parlors on weekends. At the movies we
always got popcorn, candy, and Coke. The money seemed endless.
Mom was a tightwad and
Dad was a spendthrift. He always bought people things but never
himself. He’d have the same clothes and shoes falling apart for
years but everyone had everything they wanted for Christmas. We lived
in a three-bedroom house with a basement, attic, and garage, washer
and dryer, decent furniture, Dad had a workshop in the basement, we
had a swing set and sandbox in the large backyard, a new driveway. We
had two cars. Dad always decorated the house lavishly at Christmas
and once when I had a Halloween party he did the same and even built
his own make-believe monster.
I would have slumber
parties and have friends spend the night. I usually got what I wanted
for Christmas and birthdays. We all had new dresses at Easter and we
each got a chocolate bunny, plastic bunny, and stuffed bunny. We
always had a picnic at Easter and hunted eggs we dyed. I never knew
hunger. We brought our lunch sometimes to school or ate in the
cafeteria. Dad made meatball sandwiches and Mom was a great cook
having grown up on a farm.
We went out to eat
sometimes.
We had relatives visit
and there was always plenty of food. We had a large freezer in the
garage in addition to our freezer in the kitchen. There were plenty
of canned goods.
Sometimes when we
picnicked we’d have KFC and sometimes we’d just pick it up for
dinner.
I remember when I was
little I stole a piece of candy for my oldest sister Joy from the
store we always walked to. My parents made me return it.
When I was nine I stole
an eight-ball from a drugstore with a friend and never returned it. I
remember hiding it under my coat with my best friend as we rode home
in the backseat and my dad asked us how the movie was. We just said
fine and kept looking at each other paranoid about me dropping that
ball.
I do remember one
birthday party I had, I think my 10th – a friend of mine
didn’t come and when I asked her why she said, “Mom says ya’all
are poor.” I guess that impacted me. I know it hurt my feelings and
surprised me because I never felt poor except when it came to my
clothes which Mom always shopped for the bargains. Still, if it
weren’t for school and the trends and fads I would never have known
that my clothes weren’t okay. I do remember being embarrassed about
wearing certain clothes to school. I got my sister Cindy’s
hand-me-downs which I loved because she always had cool clothes.
I remember watching my
dad pay the bills with all of them spread out on the kitchen table
and his large calculator going with all this tape rolling. He would
be writing checks, sighing, smoking, cussing, and rubbing his
temples, his eyes, looking stressed. It didn’t look fun but it
never occurred to me that one day I’d have to do the same thing. It
just never occurred to me that one day I’d be grown up too with the
same responsibilities and how I would handle that.
I remember Dad teaching
me how to count money. We would play “store” and he’d show me
how to make change. I didn’t like it and was horrible at math. But
he stressed to me that it was important I learn.
When I went to live
with my mom at age 11 the cookouts continued only there were no more
snacks because Mom didn’t believe in buying junk food and my step
dad was strict about snacking. But I never went hungry though I
started sneaking food in the middle of the night because my step dad
would count the bread to make sure I didn’t have a sandwich when I
got home from school because in his mind it would spoil my dinner.
The only time sweets were in the house was at holidays or birthdays
and not for long. But we’d go to the lake and have snacks on the
houseboat and we cooked out on the docks with the other families. And
we fished and kept most of what we caught and cooked that, too.
Then when relatives
would visit from San Francisco they would bring cheeses and salamis
and other foods that were gourmet items.
When I was 12 I started
working summers in my step dad’s office and he paid me $10 a week
which seemed a lot to me. I’d spend it in no time and my step dad
would just laugh. I had no idea what money meant.
When I was a teenager
and my dad was fighting for custody after the divorce at age 9 was
the first time I really heard about money as far as how much things
cost. I remember my dad and mom arguing about child support and my
dad talking about how much my braces cost.
When I went to a
children’s home at 14 there was plenty of food. We’d get taken
here and there and get fed even more food. But I became anorexic just
to get my mom’s attention so she’d let me come home. It didn’t
work.
Still I had plenty of
clothes during this time as I always had although Mom would buy me
gaudy, cheap clothes that I didn’t like. Once in awhile she’d buy
me something I liked.
When I was 15 and in
foster care I still had what I needed and most of what I wanted.
Still money wasn’t discussed and I never asked either. When I would
visit my sister every spring break from then on she paid for
everything and I never asked how she had so much money. Turned out
she didn’t really.
When I was 16 I got my
first real job at Six Flags. Making $3.10 an hour. That was a lot in
1982. I felt rich and I just blew it all. Since I lived in a group
home I had no bills and everything was provided. I used to look at
Seventeen Magazine and make lists of all the things I wanted. I never
got them because I didn’t understand the value of money and what it
would and wouldn’t buy.
In two more foster
homes after that the state paid for everything. We got a clothing
allowance, food was furnished at the homes, and I didn’t really
want for anything. My entire medical was paid. I had no plan or clue
as to how to make it on my own. I wish now they had taught us foster
kids about that.
When I graduated from
high school I got some graduation money and blew it except for some I
saved which I later had to use to get four wisdom teeth pulled. That
was depressing since I had to use that three weeks before I left for
college.
Then when I went off to
college the boom was lowered. No longer a ward of the state, I was on
my own pretty much. My step dad might give me a few dollars here and
there but I worked all through school, had a small journalism
scholarship later, and was on financial aid. I could eat for free in
the cafeteria but it was awful so I bought my own food with a small
stipend I got. I also got grants and loans and had side jobs.
But for the first time
I experienced hunger and going without – without money to eat, do
laundry, or have clothes – off and on. It was either feast or
famine and my friends seemed to always have money.
I drank all through
college too but didn’t pay for my own alcohol much since it was in
abundance at parties and guys would buy me drinks.
I remember when they
took my stipend away my senior years of college because of
Reaganomics and how mad I was. I felt cheated and punished and drank
about it. But never resolved it just kept working and feeling like I
was spinning my wheels.
My sister sent me money
a lot and her hand-me-downs which I still loved. She would also send
me gifts and cards.
I remember in my senior
year of college we went to a journalism convention in Chicago and
stayed at this ritzy hotel, some place I’d never stayed and I
ordered room service much to my adviser’s chagrin. I considered it
something I deserved but didn’t see the frivolity of it or the
arrogance.
During that same period
I bounced a bunch of checks and my step dad kept me out of jail.
When I got my first
place out of school, having dropped out, things only got worse. I had
no furniture at all and everything I got was given to me. I was
making minimum wage and couldn’t get by. I had a boyfriend who kept
bailing me out on hot checks. This became a pattern in all my
relationships. The guy would always rescue me and I never repaid them
although my intentions were to do it.
I was like my dad as
far as buying others gifts and not myself. But I would splurge on
hairdos and not pay my bills. On New Year’s Eve I’d also get
makeovers - not free then bounce checks for expensive makeup because
I wanted to belong. I never bought myself clothes.
I felt entitled to
splurge on hairdos, magazines, makeovers, and anything that fed my
various addictions but I wouldn’t take care of my health and was
always behind on my bills and my pets’ shots. I justified it all
and felt cheated if I didn’t get my way and deprived if I couldn’t
engage in instant gratification.
When I met my
ex-husband and we dated he paid for most everything although I would
offer. When we got engaged we planned a lavish wedding but soon
realized we had to scale down and down and down. I was embarrassed at
our wedding and reception because of the level we had to scale down
to. Looking back I’m glad we didn’t spend a bunch of money.
I’ve had over 80
jobs, have never saved anything and whatever I briefly had would fly
away just as soon as I got it or shortly thereafter.
When my ex-husband and
I went on the road the nightmare continued. What was supposed to be
this romantic existence living out of motels and making lots of money
turned out to be full of relapses and mayhem. And more bounced checks
on my part from his account, something I hid from him though not for
long.
The following year we
separated of course but he continued to help me pay the bills for
awhile until he started seeing someone and I got in a relationship
with another enabler, someone who showered me with gifts, clothes,
money, dinners, jewelry, and a car for two years.
In exchange I put up
with her abuse and cleaned her house while taking care of her in her
illness while she wasn’t working. I paid when I could but she paid
more. She finally got fed up and we would fight and fight then make
up and the cycle would continue.
After we broke up I
lost everything as a result of spending money on renting a computer
and paying on it instead of my bills. I had had a lifelong pattern of
bouncing checks, stealing, cheating, owing, lying, manipulating,
conning, and scheming. It wasn’t something I set out to do. The
money thing just overcame me and I did many things out of
desperation.
While I lived at
Gladney, a maternity home, for almost a year in 2000 when I was
placing my daughter for adoption since I couldn't take care of her, I
saved no money because I was working part-time and barely making my
bills. Luckily I had no rent, utilities, medications, or food to pay
for during this time. I never saw so much food in my life. The first
time I walked into that kitchen I felt like I was in the Garden of
Eden. There was so much fruit and vegetables. I gained 60 pounds in
my pregnancy.
When I got out it was
back to reality and back to struggling. I still liked to come across
like I had money when I didn’t. At this point I was $20,000 in
debt. Half of that were medical bills, the other half was student
loans, something I’d promised to pay back and never did. I have so
many financial amends to make.
In 2002 I tried to get
help from Texas Rehab Commission, two job coaches, and from my
sister, who set all this up only to have me disappoint her. I was
eternally broke and stopped counting how many jobs I’d had in my
life.
Then I turned 50 and
looked at no savings and I have had to go to food banks even though I
get help with groceries. I worked but didn’t make enough.
Then last year I
totaled my car and lost my job in May and have been looking for one
ever since.
I look around at many
of my friends and some are similar to me in the money area. None of
us were ever taught about money, never questioned where it came from
and how. Now as adults we have to unlearn lifelong patterns that as
children we embraced and got excited over like new toys at Christmas.
I make my own Christmas gifts and thank God for my creativity and
ingenuity. However, sometimes I can buy into that commercialism
though I usually don’t let myself get that far.
Money seems to be the
albatross that has a lot of people. I have only met a couple who “had
it under control” and had a sense of how to handle it.
I hope to one day be
there, too.
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