It goes without saying that being poor is the worst. Big time.
Absolutely everything can immediately turn into a struggle when money becomes an issue. Suddenly, you find yourself having to prioritize things that are otherwise considered essentials—food, hygiene, a roof over your head and the like.
One thing’s certain: being poor means experiencing life differently and that can be both a bad and a good thing. Folks online were recently sharing things that poor people knew all too well, but rich folk—probably not so much, and it’s all because money can solve certain problems without even noticing the problem.
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#1

The pressure of living to the next paycheck, with no safety net if anything unexpected happens
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#3

How to be hungry. Not what it feels like to be hungry, but how to live your life even though you’re hungry all the time. Heh. Edited to add (because somehow this is apparently necessary) that the chosen situation of being on a diet is not the same as being hungry and unable to afford to do anything about it.
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#5

The exact price of everything.
You could probably raise the price multiple times on an everyday item and a rich person wouldn't even notice. A poor person would notice when something's 5-10c more expensive than before.
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#7

It can be cyclic
E.g. Low income means old second-hand cars, which means poor reliability, high maintenance costs and unreliable work attendance. Car difficulty discourages longer commutes or those without public transport alternatives - further restricting employment opportunities. Limited or unstable employment worsens income and prevents investment in more reliable cars, etc.
The difficulty is finding an exit opportunity to end the positive feedback loop
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#8

1)Putting water in shampoo, conditioner or body wash so it's "more",
2)Eating the same food everyday specially at the end of a month,
3)Walking long distances because can't afford transportation,
4)Watching friends go on vacations when the most they got is going to grandma's house for *vacation*,
4)Never being able to celebrate birthdays,
5)Parents promising to buy something but they never do,
6)Dad repairing the same shoes again and again just so his children can have better things,
7)Moms skipping meals and lying about it,
8)spending the hot days without a fan because the electricity bill will be too much.
9)Giving parents the money you got as gift from relatives so it can be used for the household etc
10)Pushing yourself to study hard, overwork yourself so you don't have to pay for education (scholarships)
This is how a "lower middle class" family works in a 3rd world country. My dad got scammed of so much of his pension money and things aren't going well. Inflation is hell. I'm so glad I got scholarship for university and never have to pay for education. That's the best I could do for my poor parents. Because I know if I didn't get the scholarship they'd loan money for it and that'd be so hard to pay off. Also the unknown illness of mother... Can be cancerous. Idk, wdk, she suffers .
Sorry it's like a vent. I had to pay 75% of my monthly money for rent today(I was late to pay). Rest of this month, same free meal from my campus.
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#10

That we don't have the same rights as rich people.
I mean, yeah, the same laws apply to everyone, but if you're poor you can't afford lawyers and are not able to skip work to go to court. And landlords and bosses know this and will drag any procedure as long as possible until you quit.
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#12

How to cook a chicken. I mean like really cook a chicken
Roast the whole bird. Eat 1 breast
Remove the other breast, thigh meat and any other light meat you can
Throw the carcass in a slow cooker for 8 hours with cheap stock cubes, whatever herbs you can afford and the cutoffs from the roast veg - carrot tops, potato peelings etc.
Drain pot into a jug to keep the stock, then pick through the carcass with your fingers for all the meat that now comes off easily
Return that meat and some veg to the pot for 4/8 hours to make a stew
Use the rest of the saved meat for another meal.
A 1.2kg chicken does me for 5 days this way. It’s something I learned from my mum, whose mother raised 3 kids on a very low income post WW2 - this is how they would make the Christmas chicken work for multiple days
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#13

That there is no family to help you out financially in though situations.
No BIG inheritance waiting for you.
Nothing nil zilch!
No money is NO MONEY !
At all!
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#15

The feeling of watching all your friends go on a field trip without you because your parents couldn't afford it.
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#16

How much confidence you lost when you are poor. It seems like everyone around you look down on you. You keep doubting yourself for no good reason
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#17

Being homeless. There is nothing like it. To me, it means that every single person you know has given up on you. Parents, siblings, friends… everyone. Homelessness taught me I have no one. Maybe more importantly, it taught me to have others backs even when they don’t want it.
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#19

Using coupons and getting excited that you saved a whole 5 bucks.
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#20

How long it takes for the power company to shut your lights off if you're late on the bill
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