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At the end? Write yourself a new beginning

Posted Oct 08 2008, 01:06 PM by Donna Freedman
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Not that long ago I had about $130 to my name. I was struggling to balance a handful of part-time jobs with re-entry into college after 30 years away from higher ed.

Going back to school terrified me. But my life was already turned upside down: I'd left a long-term marriage and run through most of my savings to support myself while I dealt with health problems and also to help support my adult daughter, who is disabled. Why not throw college into the mix? As scared as I was, I knew if I didn't do it then I'd never do it.

Fast-forward to now. I managed to get through both logic and algebra, was accepted to the University of Washington on full scholarship, was awarded short-term alimony and was hired part time to write for this blog. I paid off all my divorce debt, started a Roth IRA, and have been able to help family members who are in financial trouble.

I don't say this out of self-aggrandizement. I say it because my colleague Karen Datko and I were asked to share our experiences about bottoming out, as a response to the current economic chaos.

You can read Karen's article by clicking on this link.

Here's mine: 

What looks like the end of the world can actually be the beginning.

Stability is a story that we tell ourselves so we feel good about staying right where we are in our lives. Security, whether it's a marriage or a bunch of stocks, doesn't always last. Sometimes it's taken away and sometimes we decide we can live without it.

To paraphrase Shakespeare, some people seek change and some have it thrust upon them. After the past few years I can say that sometimes, change really stinks. But I can also say that you might be surprised by what happens next.

Here today, gone tomorrow
It would be naïve in the extreme to assume that people who've just lost their shirts will automatically develop a taste for shirtlessness. It would be insulting for me to chirp, "Gosh, look on the bright side: At least you've still got your pants!"

But what I can say is this: Stocks have been and always will be a gamble. Maybe you've been a winner for years -- generations, even, in the case of inherited wealth. So lately the bottom line doesn't look that good? Well, whoever promised you that things would always go your way just flat-out lied.

Myself, I'm no high roller. But like many other people who have retirement accounts -- mine is from my newspapering days -- I'm steeling myself for the next financial statement. Although I chose the dullest, safest investment route, I know that I lost money. Who hasn't? There's not a thing I can do about that now. The money is gone.

And the economy is tottering -- but I can do something about that, namely to make the smartest financial choices possible. If I had a ton of capital, I'd be looking to buy a foreclosure. I'd love to have a home of my own, and rents are going up, up, up in Seattle. But like most of the people I know, I am severely under-capitalized.

So I'll keep doing what I'm doing -- namely, living frugally while I finish school. Afterward, too. This may be easier for me than some of you, because I have had prior experience with being broke and as a result I don't need a lot to make me happy.

What really matters
Years ago, would I have chosen this level of asceticism? Well, no. Money does make certain parts of life easier -- rent checks, medical co-pays, groceries, those sorts of things.

But there's nothing like a good scare, or even a big loss, to help you realize what's really important. I spent almost three months living in hospitals while my daughter fought a rare neurological disease that nearly killed her. My possessions were several T-shirts, a pair of jeans and a pair of sweatpants, a denim jacket, a Tupperware bowl, a cup, and a spoon, knife and fork.

My sleep was fragmented. I did my laundry in a hospital basin. I ate a lot of spartan meals. And it was all enough. The only thing I really wanted -- really needed -- was for my daughter to survive.

She did, and these days I'm thankful for "enough." I'm even more thankful that I have enough enough -- so much enough that I can spread some of it around to family and community.

The never-ending story
What I've learned from the past few years is this: No matter how things change, I have the ability, and the responsibility, to change right along with them.

In the past I was well-fed, gainfully employed and still miserable. In the past few years, I've found that rice and beans, freelance writing and a library book can make me happy.

Maybe I had to go through the tough times to make me appreciate the good times. Maybe we all do.

That's not to say that I'm unsympathetic to others whose 401(k) plans have sputtered, whose jobs are in jeopardy, whose bills are outstripping their paychecks. On the contrary: I'm very worried about the ability of many Americans to hang on until things get better.

What I'd like them to realize is that this, too, shall pass -- but it's not the only financial crisis they're ever going to have to weather. The only thing we can predict about the economy's ups and downs is that they'll keep happening. And the only thing we can change is the way we react to those ups and downs. We need to take control of our financial lives and prepare for more good scares or big losses.

And we need to remember that while change is scary, sometimes it's not the end of the story. It's the chance to write our own sequels.

Comments

 

This article is just what I needed to read right now.  You truely put the most important things in your life into perspective (your daughter's health and your health).

Normall I have a very similar outlook on tackling tough times like these, but lately it has had a heavy effect on me.  I just need to remember how good it feels to face the looming issues and tackle them one at a time.  Even if you do not get the outcome you hoped for, something good can come out of every bad situation, you just have to be strong enough to notice it.

Love your article. I am currently going through a rough time after a 16-year marriage, being financially stable for some many years  and almost completed raising a family, I  lost almost everyting. Then,  I  realized that simple things that we so normally ignore everyday  is what trully fills our lives with happiness and joy. I am reseting myself to a more simplistic, less expensive, and more family oriented life style. Now, I am becoming more focused on my health, my kids, and my family members..Thanks for the article.. It makes me look forward to better times...

I spent two years in Africa in the Peace Corps..lived in a tent, no electric, no running water, and the toilet was a ditch along the edge of the village.  Shower once a month whether you needed it or not.  No phones, no computers, no car, no television, no toilet paper..the village had ONE shortwave radio.  Yet that experience has been the happiest I've been in my life.  You learn what the important things in life are, and it's NOT the big house, the new car, the trophy wife that's a b*tch, or your name up in lights... I'll let you figure out what it is...

I absolutely agree w/everything in this article.  Contemporary human beings want too much (including myself).  We don't aprpeciate what we already have and they are the best and  FREE -  (1) feedom (2) free air to breathe (3) our health.

We want too much, not how much we actually need.  I hope the whole economic meltdown will teach us a lesson.   We need to move on despite the negative circumstances.  Well, the sun willlways come  after the rain.  Up/down, good/bad, happy/unhappy which are natural phenomeum in our lives.  We need to balance ourselves and stay moderate.

Let me wish everyone healthinesss and happiness!

Thank you for sharing your story. I have spent the last few years of my life along with my nest egg to build a green company including an extensive website with a comprehensive trade-marked Green Guide. I was focussed on making a difference in indoor air quality as much as selling our product lines. The young company  now includes a showroom in Maryland and a team of wonderful committed people.  We launched the company with a full media kit which we sent out about four weeks agoto fifty environmental, design and popular magazines.   Everyone in my life and the life of the employees on the team kept saying "wow, working wonders us, is an amazing right time, right place venture".    All of this build-up for what happened next... basically very little.  The media hasn't called.  When we have reached someone they say they are planning to do a story on us...but not yet.  Our site is getting very little traffic...and no sleep for me as I am constantly thinking about how to buy time to wait this out and not lay off any of the team members.  I'm thankful to have the opportunity to build the infrastructure for the company and now am losing a lot of sleep wondering if I will be able to wait out all the economic and political challenges to find out if I can make it successful with the little cash flow I have left.  I was basically a very risk averse person my whole life and would have never thought I'd end up in this situation but I think you are right. Many good things can be born from these kinds of struggle.  

I have never responded to an article on line but had to write to say thanks for this one. I too am currently recovering from several losses in life and considering some new steps for the future. I have been scared because taking them involves leaving some financial security to go off on my own in a direction where I do believe I would be happier. I had come to the conclusion that I needed to trust that if I had faith and followed where I felt led to go, it would all work out. Your story is a helpful reminder that while money is important, it is not everything. When we step out in faith as we feel called, it will be ok. Thanks.

Great story, Donna.  Thanks for sharing it.  

I liked your story.  But, I have to say that what worked for you will not work for many others.  Health issues as your story tells can litterally deveastate anyone.  My wife and i are living with our daughter because we are just too sick to go back to school, go back to work, basically live on the street as you basically did.  We have an income, a modest one.  We are very frugal.  We have to be.  We spend 20 dollars on some kind of trinket or bs and we will not make it to the end of the month.  Our daughter lives upstairs and we live downstairs.  It is not as NICE as you may think.  It can be trying on her as well as on us.  But, this economy thing.  We cannot do anything about it.  Our health just will not let us.  Yes we will more than likely live for another 20 to 30 years - but - not as working for a living type of couple.  We do however take care of our grandchildren and do some cooking.  We do not last, meaning we run out of energy and get very tired and have to take naps and sit down and rest.  I know that we are not alone.  We have no IRA, the corporations and banks took those things long ago.  Yes we planned and the corporations took our 401 K money ans spent it.  Those corporations are long gone and out of business for over 30 years now.  I went through 9 corporations that failed.  Finally i just went to work in fast food.  It kept a roof over our head and kept us fed.  Credit and borrowing did not happen.  Kinda hard to do that on 5 bucks an hour and tightwad bosses.  Whatever happens to Wall Street or the World Economy is going to happen with or without me.  Best thing to do is not go on a vacation or spending spree.  Best hold your money and such close to you.  I do not trust any and i mean any bank right now.  They can be big and they can be small and as we have seen, they all can fall.  I do not blame this economy or banking crisis on the President.  It took many years of messing with the banking industry to mess it up.  It was on its way down in 1972 and really got a good start in 1999.  Se la vee.  WE have to just pull our bootstraps up and go forward.  I know for a fact you are not going to be given the opportunity to go back.   Thanks for reading this and I do wish all of you well.  Remember, God and Family is really all you have whether you live in the United States or some other place.

Johnnylloyd

Yay!  Yay for you, and others like you!

As one who has successfully raised two kids as a single mom working as a waittress, WITHOUT welfare or child support,  one thing I have learned and learned well is that I can be Happy, even though poor.

Happiness is a choice.

My self worth is NOT based on how much money and stuff I have, nor is my sense of  'security'.

I have had a ton of amazing successes occur in my life, and NONE of them have made me any wealthier financially.

Kudos to you, for having the ability to trully prioritize, and to keep things in perspective through tough times.  Especially, to continue to have hope and to keep going FORWARD, even when things were bleak.

More and more of us are going to be acquiring these very real skills as these tight years progress.  We will come out of it as better people, with more 'real' communities, and children who are raised with 'real' values, rather than mainly  materialistic ones.

People are amazing, and it is going to become evident just how amazing we can be, as the needs arise, and we are forced out of our soft beds and into a new and lively day!

Let it all crumble around us if it must; we WILL go forward, we will remember who we really are, and we will live lives full of happiness, purpose and meaning, of a sort we as a people, have never experienced before!

The future awaits us all, folks... we can go into it kicking and screaming, or we can dance onward and grow.  It isn't going to be easy, in fact , it's likely to get pretty hard, often.  But with the right attitudes, it will be an amazing experience!

Keep perspective, prioritize, have hope, keep moving forward, and keep dancing!

Have a wonderful life, everyone!  No matter what!

I can't thank yo enough for this blog. I JUST hit bottom. Divorce after 22-years and my bank account statement today read $54.15. Your story has made me sit up, get up, shut up and DO!!!

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