Well-meaning people tried to encourage me by pointing out how far I had come. “You’re working!” they said, “You’re housed!” And the declaration I found most diminishing: “I’m so proud of you!”
I was 52 and I did not mark my progress by those measurements. Rather, I marked my progress by how far I had fallen. What did it mean that I was earning enough to rent a room in someone’s house when just a few years ago, I had owned a three-acre horse ranch in Oregon?
One of the most debilitating symptoms of post-traumatic stress is that people who suffer from it avoid the things that hurt them most. For me, that meant I avoided myself.
I was full of shame and self-hatred. Hatred that I—someone who had once had hundreds of thousands of dollars in the stock market—had collapsed. Hatred that I had become one of “them.” Lori Teresa Yearwood, Technology Review
For years, I’ve tried to work my way back into the middle class
The new AI advanced version of Google Se...
Business
A very current short play by Bill Irwin....
Culture
Rewatching Star Trek: The Next Generatio...
Media
Rewatching ST:TNG The Enterprise is...
Empathy
If you think middle-class children are...
Culture
The girl plays Ti Moune in "Once on This...
Culture



