![]() I learned the power of saying "no" to happy hours and to dinner invites and to birthdays where I didn't even know the person's middle name. I learned how to spend less on things I actually did need to buy and avoid triggers like "20% off" coupons that made me want to buy things I didn't need because they were on sale. I learned how to save by socking away money where I couldn't see it-in an account separate from my "regular" one that I check infrequently and that automatically pulls from my checking account on payday. I learned things that seemingly everyone else knew, but I didn't. And I started thinking like the person I wanted to be. So I stopped thinking like a poor person. And making an editor's salary meant re-learning all the things I should have learned earlier on. After hitting rock bottom around 24 (relatively young, I know), I needed to start from scratch. ![]() ![]() Working amongst fashion journalists and being the person who tells you what to wear and how to wear it and reporting on the $1,600 bag "everyone" is buying is part of the job-it creates a want for a type of lifestyle I just can't afford.Īnd it's the realization that I can't afford it-the sobering truth of that statement-that has led me to realize that I don't need to. And we don't learn about things that could save us heartache in the long run-like 401Ks and IRAs-because 1) We need the money now and 2) That's what "wealthy" people have, not us.Īs a young person in New York, it's easy for me to get swept up in the trappings of the city. So what do we do? We spend on things because we "deserve them." We save very little. "They spoil themselves as adults because they're making up for all the ways they felt deprived as kids." "I hear it from people all the time," financial planner Katie Brewer told. It's not only because we lack the money management skills, but it's psychological: We don't want that money to just slip away, and we also want the things that can make us "normal" to others. Those who grow up poor are actually more likely to spend-especially in times of crisis-than their wealthier counterparts. 'We have to spend this before it disappears.'" Don't misunderstand me here, it's never a 'greed' thing. If you don't buy it right now, you know that the money will slowly bleed away to everyday life over the course of the next few months, leaving you with nothing to show for it. ![]() Instead of thinking, 'This will cover our rent and bills for half a year,' you immediately jump to all the things you've been meaning to get, but couldn't afford on your regular income. Not a cent.Īs one journalist wrote, "When a windfall check is dropped in your lap, you don't know how to handle it. Did it go to paying off those student loans? Nope. The $800 that came from my grandfather after his passing when I was 22 and had just moved to New York City went to things I couldn't buy before-a dinner out with my new friends, drinks with co-workers, and a trip to see my best friend in LA. As someone who grew up with a small bank account (and have been working since the age of 15), when I got my first influx of cash-I spent it. This is not something you see with many other types of scarcity."īut this impacts decision-making on a larger scale, too. "It's not a choice you're making-you're just reduced to few options. "When you're poor you can't say, 'I've had enough, I'm not going to be poor anymore.' Or, 'Forget it, I just won't give my kids dinner, or pay rent this month.' Poverty imposes a much stronger load that's not optional and in very many cases is long lasting," co-author Eldar Shafir said. "I have PB&J Mom, so I can last a couple more days 'til the next paycheck," you say, knowing that your bank account is about $2 away from being overdrawn and that your mom would send you money she needs to eat because she loves you and doesn't want your muscles to deteriorate because "you need your protein!" (Eggs are really cheap, thank god.) This, of course, is the same day your roommate announces they just bought some expensive designer shoes at Barneys because they were on sale and "my parents paid my rent this month." The conversations you have with your parents are very different than the ones your cubicle mate is having with theirs. But when you grow up in a town that hovers around 23% under the poverty line (far above the national average) when plenty of your meals consist of cheap standbys like mac and cheese and ramen when you know what free lunch programs taste like (why was the ham sandwich always so wet?!) and you end up going to a prestigious university and later, moving to one of the most expensive places to live and earning a salary that makes you rethink following your passions, you get it.
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