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A Poor Man’s Life

Jan 28, 2015
by Caroline Miller
bag-lady syndrome, government's safety net, Obama Care, poor and old In the U. S.A, When Your Money Is All Gone, William McPherson
4 Comments

I got my annual letter from Social Security the other day.  Instead of going up the 2% predicted for retirees, I am going to receive $15 a month less.  Oh, I got my incremental rise, like everyone else, but my medical insurance rose high enough to eat the increment.  I’m not complaining.  I’d sold a couple of stocks in 2014, made a profit and the government wants its share.   

I’m happy to pay, particularly as the wife of a former student  was snatched from the jaws of an invasive cancer thanks to Obama Care.  My taxes pay for her and others in need and I’m glad of it.  I only wish the designers of medical plans recognized that teeth are part of the human body. The poor need dental coverage, too.

 Still, despite my joy that the life of someone I know has been spared, I continue to suffer from the  bag lady syndrome (Blog 9/23/14 ).  If I  live to my mother’s current age, 98, I fear I might outlive my income.  Or, that a disease will overtake me and my savings will be consumed by expensive prescriptions.  It can happen.  It does happen.

 William McPherson knows what I’m talking about.  He was a middleclass guy, a writer who worked for some prestigious newspapers in his younger days and won a Pulitzer prize along the way.  Today he’s poor and lives off the generosity of his family and a little help from the government.  So far, he’s managed to  avoid living on the street, having been lucky enough to find subsidized housing.  But he coexists with a sense of humiliation, ashamed that he’s become a burden to his family and the government.  (“When Your Money Is All Gone,” by William McPherson, excerpted from The Hedgehog Review published by the University of Virginia, in The Week, December 26, 2014, pgs. 36-37.)  As McPherson describes it, to live without a bank account and find yourself sitting on a park bench without a dime is a very lonely feeling.

 McPherson admits he wasn’t as careful with his money as he should have been.  He had a good life and some marvelous adventures as he travelled the globe, dipping into his investments without much thought about old age.  Maybe the memories are worth the price he is paying.   He doesn’t say.  But one investment that has kept him off the streets is his education.  With it, he’s been able to survive  a maze of  a bureaucratic red tape that would have confounded those with  less schooling or a language barrier.   Nonetheless, the money he gleans from the government  doesn’t pay for his teeth, nor does it pay for a hard drive when his computer crashes — death to a writer.

 What happened to McPherson could happen to anyone.  Let conservatives roar about Obama Care. Without it, one day,  when old ages taps you on the shoulder, you might find yourself plunged into the icy waters of poverty. To those in the new Congress who propose reductions in the government’s safety net, I say let them  give up their lucrative medical perks first and live like the rest of us.  If that were to happen, we’d see more benevolent  legislation coming  out of Washington. 

William McPherson

William McPherson courtesy of chicagotribune.com

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4 Comments
  1. Judy Farrell January 28, 2015 at 12:17 pm Reply
    Greetings Carrie, I am so enjoying your blog, thanks to Billi Odegaard who told me about it. Speaking of Billi, I think Mr. McPherson would be a condidate for dental care at the clinic on NW Broadway and Burnside named after Billi. We toured the clinic, which adjoins a medical clinic, during its opening, and found it to be cutting edge and dedicated to serving folks who usually can't afford dental costs. Also, I wanted to share with you my experience working with the tenants in Chaucer Court, a HUD apartment building a couple blocks north of the downtown main library on SW 10th Avenue. A friend of mine had been hired to relocate all the tenants temporarily, two floowrs at a time, while the building was being updated. The group of owners were very concerned that the individual needs of each tenant be addressed during the planning and actual transition. Each tenant was placed in a market rate apartment for a period of several months. My friend, Martha Gies, was experienced, and I assisted with individual tenant assessments and assisting some with their temporary apartment selections. So, over the months of this project, I had the opportunity to meet many of the tenants, and found them all to be such an interesting mix of folks. I decided that if my own finances become stressed at some point (i presently am 80), I would be perfectly comfortable in a HUD apartment. Fortunately, I was a community health nurse in North and NOrtheast POrtland for many years, and I received so many importland life lessons from my clients....all former judgments I held were tossed to the winds. I hope that Mr. McPherson' friends and family keep in close touch, inviting him for interesting walks about town, films, coffee, etc. These transitions can require a calm, positive attitude until a satisfactory routine is established.....actually, I would do better in a HUD complex than the very fancy facility in which my mom lived.....but the important thing was that she enjoyed it.....not my judgment to make! Not all of us are gifted with the MaryLou level of optimism, certainly not I. Finally at this late stage of my life, I am seeing a therapist for anxiety since I often see even a minor as horrendous and scary, it's not easy but I am gaining insight. Thank you for sharing your thoughts in your wonderful blogs, I can relate to each one of them. Judy Farrell
    • Caroline Miller January 28, 2015 at 1:05 pm Reply
      Judy, thank your for such a heartfelt reply to today's blog. Your experience shows that we do have a society that cares. Glad to hear about the dental work available. As for the HUD housing, we need more of it, of course, but I'm glad the program is working as you describe it. Being old or poor isn't for sissies but if we maintain a caring society, life doesn't look so scary. Again, thank you so much for sharing your thoughts.
  2. Annie Stratton February 1, 2015 at 5:33 pm Reply
    Caroline, last year when I got a small raise in my social security benefits, the concomitant rise in my health insurance wiped out any benefit I might have gotten. In addition, Congress failed to raise the income cut off for other assistance, or to recognize that for older folks in particular, the largest expenses are fuel, food, and medical care: all things that the current Cost of Living assessment does not adjust for. It put me above the cut-off for special assistance, which raised my part D premium and nearly lost me my eligibility for state assistance with my prescriptions. So an annual increase of $150 ended up costing me a whole lot more than that. Hundreds of dollars more. It would have been more had not the state in which I live not recognized that what had happened was fundamentally unfair, and made some adjustments for people in my situation. I am lucky to live where I do. I don't mind that Congress gets health benefits. I do mind when they don't think through the impacts of the changes they make: what happens to people when their income goes up just enough to put them over some arbitrary line. That line needs to be considered when Social Security undergoes a COLA.
    • Caroline Miller February 1, 2015 at 7:12 pm Reply
      Thank you for sharing your experience, Annie. Frankly, it reads like a horror tale. No, I don't mind that Congress gets health benefit, either. But they have isolated themselves from the world they create for ordinary citizens and don't face the consequences of the laws they make. If they did, I repeat, the laws would be different.

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Contact Caroline at

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Portland, Oregon author Caroline Miller had distinguished careers as an educator, union president, elected official and artist/advocate.

Her play, Woman on the Scarlet Beast, was performed at the Post5 Theatre, Portland, OR, January/February 2015

Caroline published a serialized novelette, Marie Eau-Claire, on the website, The Colored Lens.  She also published the story Gustav Pavel,  a parable about ordinary lives, choice and alternate potential, on the website Fixional.co.

Caroline has published four novels

  • Ballet Noir
  • Trompe l’Oeil
  • Gothic Spring
  • Heart Land

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