Both parents were addicts, and they’d leave us at home for weeks without checking on us, bringing food, paying utilities. I was young when this started, but I remember most of the rough stuff happening when I was between 8-12 years old.
Because of my age, I didn’t know that water companies didn’t actually come out to do “water pipe tests” and then forget to turn your water back on. My dad taught us to always wait until the utility guys were gone, and he had a homemade water tool he taught us to use to turn it back on.
He said if we did it while they were there still, someone would get fired for not doing his job, and since it was so simple, we would just do his job for him for free. I was either too innocent to comprehend what was actually happening, or I somehow refused to see it.
My sister, brother, and I would have “yard sales” daily after school and on the weekends to be able to order enough pizza for all of us. We usually made only a few dollars, but we’d scrounge more junk to sell until it made enough to have pizza delivered.
Even at a young age, I did always feel bad about being unable to tip the drivers, but I have always made sure to be an extremely good tipper as an adult to make up for being that starving child that couldn’t before.
As I grew into my teens, I slowly learned how much worse things were than I had accepted before. My sister, brother, and I always feared being taken away and split up, so we sort of had this understanding as to how we would keep things from getting beyond the walls of our house.
Our house had started being painted one year, and my parents had written a bad check to the company, so they stopped painting it halfway through. Other people always talked about it and would pick at us for it, and it was in very poor shape.
My only 2 best friends from middle through high school, slowly learned the reality of my life, and they pretty much helped me in every way possible. They never judged me poorly, they never frowned or told other kids when our water was shut off, they’d even occasionally bring stuff for us to sell at these awful yard sales we kept having.
When it rained, they knew to run to the kitchen for all of the pots and pans bc it would be pouring rain inside the house. Somehow, we managed to turn all of that stuff into a way of life that seemed positive somehow.
To this day, they are still my 2 best friends, and I can’t imagine life without them. By the time I was in my mid-late 20s, both parents had finally cleaned themselves up, and for the first time in my life, I experienced what it was actually like having parents who knew I existed.
Almost 40 now, mom has passed already, but my dad still lives a very sober life. It was hard knowing I only had 3 shirts, a pair of shorts, and 1 pair of pants to rotate in and out- rarely able to wash them, and none even fit.
I still don’t like that awful feeling when the “snobs”(that’s what I called them in my head when I was very young) would laugh and loudly ask me why I wore the same shirt 2 days in a row, or 3 days in the same week, and all of their attention brought more attention to my poor and dirty lifestyle I was trying to keep hidden.
Username: PoorCree