Okay, okay -
Feb. 6th, 2006 08:09 amI don't know what's going on over there - but one of my birthday-sisters and her husband have put up a pair of posts this morning. And I don't even know if they're aware they're shadowing each other.
But the pair? Call it paying it forward -
First, his - Once upon a time I had a young wife when I was young and a newborn babe to take care of. No jobs...so I walked 5 miles to get to the local "plasma donating place" and sat with a needle in my arm for a few hours to get $15. On the way home I would stop and by myself a dough nut and a half pint of milk. The little that was left went to buy food for my wife and baby and other baby needs. I did that twice a week and I drank water the rest of the time....no food.
After doing this for 3 months I had lost so much weight and my iron levels dropped so low I could not "donate" any more. I sat on the stoop and cried.
One of the "vampires" (as we joking referred to the folks working there) was leaving for lunch and saw me sitting there in tears. He asked me what was wrong and I told him what was going on, and I told him the whole story. He told me he would be right back and went inside again.
A few minutes later he came out with a couple of the other employees of the place and told me they were going to give me a ride home, we ended up at a greek restaurant and they bought me a fantastic lunch. (
lord_keeper)
But before, that? His wife
elfwench had posted - So Keeper decided it was time for a field trip to the grocery store. The kids (then 8 and 11 years old) didn't know what a steak was, they confessed. So it was decided then and there that we would have a steak dinner and that it was time for a field trip to the grocery store. He'd been on short-term disability leave after breaking his hand at work, and he'd been living cheap at a friend's while getting his workman's comp, so he'd put back a bit.
He grabbed a cart, and told me and the kids to grab one too... four carts. And while I wasn't surprised at the second cart, I thought it was cute he was going to let the kids each push a cart and feel like they were helping. Little did I know that he was planning on filling each of the carts brimming full.
Is food kindness? It is when you need it - there are no ways seen to find a way through to enough of it, and yeah - the things you can't eat are sometimes just as important.
Both Jim and I grew up in homes without enough food in them (when I tell folks I also grew up in a home on WW, they don't get it. Yeah, the two can go together. Have a step-parent. The dynamics can get really wonky) - he won't touch a plate of liver and onions, for example. Me? Tuna fish sandwiches are still a guilty pleasure. We either had the tuna or the bread. Not the two together.
Insanely simple stuff - but this is where a lot of families live. Don't forget that.
But the pair? Call it paying it forward -
First, his - Once upon a time I had a young wife when I was young and a newborn babe to take care of. No jobs...so I walked 5 miles to get to the local "plasma donating place" and sat with a needle in my arm for a few hours to get $15. On the way home I would stop and by myself a dough nut and a half pint of milk. The little that was left went to buy food for my wife and baby and other baby needs. I did that twice a week and I drank water the rest of the time....no food.
After doing this for 3 months I had lost so much weight and my iron levels dropped so low I could not "donate" any more. I sat on the stoop and cried.
One of the "vampires" (as we joking referred to the folks working there) was leaving for lunch and saw me sitting there in tears. He asked me what was wrong and I told him what was going on, and I told him the whole story. He told me he would be right back and went inside again.
A few minutes later he came out with a couple of the other employees of the place and told me they were going to give me a ride home, we ended up at a greek restaurant and they bought me a fantastic lunch. (
But before, that? His wife
He grabbed a cart, and told me and the kids to grab one too... four carts. And while I wasn't surprised at the second cart, I thought it was cute he was going to let the kids each push a cart and feel like they were helping. Little did I know that he was planning on filling each of the carts brimming full.
Is food kindness? It is when you need it - there are no ways seen to find a way through to enough of it, and yeah - the things you can't eat are sometimes just as important.
Both Jim and I grew up in homes without enough food in them (when I tell folks I also grew up in a home on WW, they don't get it. Yeah, the two can go together. Have a step-parent. The dynamics can get really wonky) - he won't touch a plate of liver and onions, for example. Me? Tuna fish sandwiches are still a guilty pleasure. We either had the tuna or the bread. Not the two together.
Insanely simple stuff - but this is where a lot of families live. Don't forget that.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 04:42 pm (UTC)One day we were coming back from running an errand and we stopped at an intersection in Humble TX, waiting for the light to change. And we just happened to see a $100 bill (of all things) just blowing by in the wind! We both jumped out of the car and my ex wife managed to snag it before it blew away. We were both incredulous. But the first thing we did was go straight to the grocery store and buy as much as we could for $100. First time our pantry was full in a long time. And I always wondered who was looking out for us then :-O
no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 04:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 05:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 05:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 06:00 pm (UTC)Growing up, I remember that food wasn't a problem, which I am very grateful for. But university --that was a whole different story altogether, especially when in a foreign country and restricted to limited working hours on campus at minimum wage. When the toss-up between rent and food came along, rent won, hands down. After graduation when the company I worked for suddenly retrenched all its foreign workers without warning, food got a little complicated especially when I developed gluten allergies but I couldn't afford the food I -could- eat. I will never forget sitting down in tears when a group of my friends got together and -shopped- an entire grocery cart's worth of food for me - they were in all different states - and had someone send it to my apartment.
It made all the difference in the -world-.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 06:26 pm (UTC)So is finding a $20 bill hanging in the grass in the backyard when you're broke.
growing up....
Date: 2006-02-06 06:41 pm (UTC)It gave me plenty to think about when I'm in a poor state like I am now and believe me, steak is something that will always make me smile.
When you learn to live without, I find that life's little pleasures are when you can get something to eat that you don't have on a daily basis.
Because of this, I always provide my employees with a free meal whenever they work, and for those who work closely with me, my kitchen is always open to the occaisional grazer. Cup o' Noodles goes a long way.
I always do my part to help someone when I can because I'm a firm believer in karma, what goes around comes around.
Food is kindness. I know what a small amount of food can do for someone who's down on their luck.
Yes, it is.
Date: 2006-02-06 07:09 pm (UTC)And we will keep on paying it forward every time we can, by donating to the Food Bank in town. I collect food donations for the Food Bank at every Democrats' meeting in our legislative district, and take it down there, because we remember how it was when we didn't have much food or money, and because we remember Charles splitting his lunch (his main daily meal) with a guy on a Labor Ready jobsite who fainted because he hadn't eaten for three days.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 07:28 pm (UTC)I've had several occasions (usually lasting more than a few days) that resulted in my having to scrounge for food or even not eat for most of the day. (note: I was in high school and typically skipped both breakfast and lunch, but ended up making up for that by eating at dinner... so I am thinking that the hypoglycemia is something I brought on myself, but it's too late now)
And then there is the time I had no job and was on Student Loans. I only had enough money for clif bars and almonds, bread, and some nutella, but the bread and nutella had to last 2 weeks each.
Even now, money's not that tight, but I often don't have either the time or inclination to buy food.
C.
I remember those times.
Date: 2006-02-06 07:37 pm (UTC)When we were low ....
Taco sauce sandwiches.
Sometimes lucky enough to have cheese.
I learned lots of cooking tricks.
A can of V-8, a pack of ramen and whatever scraps of veggies could be had were soup. (the packing shed would let us have the stuff that wasn't marketable)
Being "full" before we'd finished so that there would be plenty for the kid.
I remember.
Moon
no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 07:58 pm (UTC)We were particularly screwed because we were semi-homeless - hotel room, no fridge or way to cook anything. Six months like that. We'd go over to our friends' house once or twice a week to boil some rice or pasta - but they had six or seven people in a one-bedroom apartment with maybe three jobs between them, and coulldn't spare us much more than that stove access.
I used to dream about *hot* food. With protein in it, somehow. I was depressed and suffering panic attacks, and I've always had food sensitivities; I was terrified of going to a soup kitchen. Also, most of the kitchens were attached to shelters, and I'd rather live out of my car or a cardboard box than be trapped in a place like that with scary strangers. (And God, I wish I'd known my partner then was pre-diabetic - don't know what I could have done about it, but feeding us nothing but starch? Sigh.)
When we both landed jobs at the same retail store on the pier, our manager - one of the kindest people I know to this day - instead of using the "free lunch coupons" the pier restaurants gave him for employee motivators, he slipped them all to us. Those free lunches - real restaurant lunches, from the seafood restaurants - kept us on our feet through those first few weeks of working an eight-hour retail job, before a paycheck came in; I don't know if we could've done it on bread.
I still give McDonald's coupons away to the homeless sometimes, especially in the cold and rainy seasons. People say I should encourage them to eat healthier and they should go to the food bank and so on - but let me tell you, a 99 cent cheeseburger, when it's the first *hot* meal you've had in a week and your only meal of the day - it's like an angelic choir in your stomach, even if it gives you indigestion because it's the first meat you've had in weeks. It's *warm*. It's got enough weight to feel like real food, too, unlike the loaf of white bread you've been living off of.
I'd rather feed them Chinese or something a little more nutritious, but I can't carry coupons for those. And I know that, except for the meat/grease thing, McDonald's is pretty bland, and most people can manage to eat it. WHen I was starving, with my wonky stomach, I couldn't keep down spicy stuff - even mildly spicy stuff.
Later, we had housing but were still darn poor - we ate a little better, but I still dreamed of coming into some extra money and splurging on cheese and beef and ice cream and luxury foods. Of going to the grocery store and buying *anything* we wanted.
...I'm gonna go fix breakfast now - something hot - and go hug my refrigerator and stove. I don't need to buy groceries yet, but part of me wants to just because I can.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 10:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-06 11:08 pm (UTC)Wish I could hang onto the dumb coupons long enough -
no subject
Date: 2006-02-07 07:36 am (UTC)*hugs you*
no subject
Date: 2006-02-08 01:36 am (UTC)I think my man and I are soulmates. Truly.