Subscribe to Aridni Saving For Things That Last

For those of you who read my article last week regarding my fall-out with my friend in Virginia, I am back to report that I spent my time off visiting a close friend in North Carolina. My friend Carrie lives in the “sticks,” about an hour’s drive from the Outer Banks, and her family confirmed my belief that people who are least able to afford life’s luxuries are also the most insistent on making their guests comfortable and meeting their every need. The principle of creating a hospitality savings account (see my earlier article) seems to apply to the majority of true Southerners, especially those who work hard for what they have and take pride in being able to share their modest, but well earned comforts with guests. Carrie’s mother told me that from the time she was a child, she was taught to make every guest feel like a “queen” even though her family was barely able to scrape by. For these people, hospitality is one of their greatest virtues.

Carrie’s family lives in the poorest county in North Carolina with the state’s (and for that matter, the nation’s) lowest ranked public school system. In order to offer their three children a chance at a better life, Carrie’s parents denied themselves luxuries many of us take for granted so that they could send Carrie, her brother and sister to parochial high schools and then to college. I was amazed at this family’s commitment to education, a commitment that on one level is even stronger than in the greater Boston community in which I grew up where 95% of the kids in our public high school matriculate at four year colleges. I was not considered successful for going to college- it was simply expected and to do otherwise was unthinkable. I would have only been a topic of cocktail gossip if I had gone to Harvard, and even Harvard is considered “normal” around here. Yet, for families like Carrie’s, getting into any college is a major achievement and their dedication to education is so pervasive because they can’t afford to feel otherwise. They have seen the alternative first hand, while the people I grew up around were hardly aware that most Americans were living a different reality.

It seems to me that the working poor and working classes are more conscious of the value of money than any other socioeconomic group. They put in long hours to earn their small paycheck. Consequently, they value every dollar much more than a single mother on welfare whose monthly government check reflects tax payer’s dollars and not her own labor. Carrie’s father works at a paper mill and while I was down there this week, he was working the night shift every day so I barely got to talk to him. However, he asked me to let him know if there was anything he could do to make my visit pleasant. The working poor may not know the ins and outs of CDs, 401Ks, and IRAs, but they do know how to use a savings account and they put money away for things that have lasting value like education and a comfortable, welcoming home as opposed to saving up for an Ann Taylor suit as I did once in high school. If I had grown up like Carrie, there wouldn’t have been any Ann Taylors within a 100 mile radius and I probably would have been using my earnings at McDonalds to help pay for my private school tuition if that opportunity was within my reach.

So the next time you lament about not being able to afford a new car or a bigger house, think about families like Carrie’s who are struggling to afford their mortgage and the rising cost of gas. When I offered to pay them back for the cost of the gas to and from the airport, her mother said “don’t be silly. You are our guest.”

This article written by Danielle on 9th August 2006

2 Comments »

  1. smon says

    oops hit submit by accident. to continue, many rich have similar qualities. many guests would find ways of easing the financial burden of their visit without asking “to pay the cost of the gas”. for example borrowing the car for a simple errand then filling the tank. bringing with you a needed gift.
    Having been truly poor i know what it feels like to not have the gas in the tank needed to get to the airport.
    as for you comments of those on welfare, sorry, single mothers on welfare, ann taylor suits and the rest, I can only feel that your loosely founded opinions stem from lack of both experience and research. Not to mention prejudice.
    To respond in kind:
    There would seem to be, with some amongst the more affluent, those with whom their acceptance of a basic socioeconomic bias is justified and made more comfortable by a belief that those experiencing comparative socioeconomic discomfort have more moral fibre.
    doesn`t stop them dying from malnutrition, disease, or simply the lack of moral caring by those who have the power to help.
    Your comments do nothing to establish a more balanced society. filling up the tank WITHOUT asking, might help your friends.
    Withdrawing or witholding comment on those of whom you seem to have little experience might make you one problem less for OUR world today.
    I hope you will accept my criticism without the prejudice which you`ve applied in certain aspects of your article.
    We do not, after all know each other.

    August 14th, 2006 | #

  2. Danielle says

    Thank you for your comment.

    I’m not quite sure how you extracted such an opinion from my article, but you obviously did not understand the thesis of the article. To the contrary of what you said in your post, I am not prejudiced against the working poor at all. In fact, my dad grew up very impoverished. The point of my article was that many (but not all) wealthy people do not value the things they have in the same way that someone will who has had to save up for them. I’m sorry if my comment about welfare mothers offended you. While there are many people on welfare who certainly need, value, and appreciate their government checks, there are just as many who abuse the system and there is a difference between a hand out and a hand up. My article was intended to shed a positive, flattering light on the working poor, not to degrade them as you said.

    September 5th, 2006 | #

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