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tanagusto.'s avatar

I needed someone to speak of how it is for kids with low income salary parents once we become independent, the feeling of dread every time you make a purchase knowing very well that you need it, but fearing the possibility that maybe tomorrow your boss will for some reason fire you, or maybe your rent will go up in half a year, and you would have to leave all behind to go back to your parent's because they can simply not help you financially with your shared flat. I hadn't seen anyone write or talk about this so eloquently and openly online, maybe, ever? So thank you, specially knowing your exact struggle as someone living in Valencia, it is hard feeling like you will make it. Lots of love!

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maja roglić's avatar

i feel this so much. i grew up in a town where i was the only one of my friends who lived in an apartment, not a house. even though we were never poverty-line poor, there was a stark difference between my family and my friends’. i am a first-generation american; my parents moved to the US with only $2,000 when i was 3. ever since i was little, writing has been my passion, but i never considered it a career possibility due to financial restraints. i was bitter; i gave up my dreams.

but then i think: even though i never took vacations, never went to disney, or had expensive clothes, isn’t what i did have—a roof over my head and food to eat—considered wealth to a large percentage of the world?

i am constantly stuck between trying to feel grateful for the privileges i did inherit and resentful for the ones i didn’t.

after 6 years of trying to make it work in corporate america, i realized that a life without art would kill me. now, i am finally trying to find time to write on the side while still pursuing my 40-hour-a-week “career.”

but at the end of the day, i am choosing to believe that i, too, have generational wealth. eyes to see, hands to write with, dreams that fuel me. this is the wealth that propels me to write now.

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