Growing up, Saturday mornings meant something different at our house.
While my friends’ families headed to the supermarket with carefully planned lists and coupon books, we’d pile into my father’s Mercedes and drive forty minutes to the organic farmers’ market in the countryside. My mother would chat with vendors about soil quality while my father examined heirloom tomatoes like they were rare gems.
I thought everyone lived this way.
Then at twenty-nine, I lost everything. The business I’d built collapsed, taking my savings, my confidence, and most of my assumptions about how the world worked with it. For the first time in my life, I stood in a food bank queue, avoided calls from landlords, and learned what it meant to choose between heating and eating.
Rebuilding from nothing taught me lessons that no amount of reading or observation could have provided. Now, years later, having clawed my way back to stability, I watch wealthy friends discuss poverty with the same naive certainty I once had. They mean well, but there are fundamental realities about being poor that comfortable people simply cannot grasp—not through lack of empathy, but because these truths run counter to everything their lives have taught them.
Here are nine things I learned the hard way.
1. Time isn’t money when you’re poor—it’s survival currency
Wealthy people love to say “time is money,” as if the two are interchangeable. When you’re broke, time becomes something else entirely. It’s the four-hour round trip on three buses to save £2 on groceries. It’s waiting six hours at the free clinic because you can’t afford a private appointment. It’s spending your entire Sunday at the launderette because you don’t have a washing machine.
I remember calculating whether I could afford to take a faster route to a job interview. The train would cost £15 and take thirty minutes. The bus route would take two hours but only cost £3. That £12 difference meant three days of food. I took the bus, arrived sweaty and exhausted, and didn’t get the job.
The wealthy optimize their time to make more money. The poor sacrifice their time to spend less money. These are fundamentally different relationships with time itself.
2. Every financial decision carries the weight of potential catastrophe
When you have money, a bad purchase is annoying. When you’re poor, it can unravel your entire life. Buy shoes that fall apart after a month? That’s next month’s electricity bill gone. Choose the wrong mobile phone plan? You might miss the call for that job interview because you ran out of credit.
I once spent forty minutes in a supermarket aisle, calculator in hand, trying to figure out whether buying toilet paper in bulk would leave me enough for bus fare that week. The mental exhaustion of making every penny count, of running scenarios for every possible emergency, is something wealthy people never experience. They make decisions. Poor people make survival calculations.
3. Being poor is incredibly expensive
This sounds like a contradiction, but poverty charges interest on everything. Can’t afford a yearly bus pass? You’ll pay twice as much buying daily tickets. Don’t have £500 for a washing machine? You’ll spend £10 a week at the launderette—£520 a year. Need a loan? The only ones available to you charge 400% APR.
When my laptop died, I couldn’t afford a decent replacement. I bought a cheap one for £150 that lasted six months. Then another. Then another. Within two years, I’d spent £600 on terrible laptops when £500 would have bought one that lasted five years. But I never had £500 at once.
The economist Samuel Vimes’ “boots theory” isn’t just clever—it’s the daily reality of poverty. Quality costs money upfront that you don’t have, so you pay more over time for inferior goods. It’s a tax on being poor that the wealthy can’t even see.
4. Your body keeps score in ways the wealthy never experience
Poverty lives in your bones. It’s the constant tension in your shoulders from stress. It’s the dental problems you can’t afford to fix, so you learn to chew on one side. It’s skipping meals and calling it “intermittent fasting” to make it sound like a choice.
I developed a twitch in my left eye during my worst months. My doctor said it was stress-related and suggested yoga classes. Yoga classes. When I couldn’t afford bread. The disconnect was so absurd I actually laughed.
Wealthy people treat their bodies like investments. Poor people treat their bodies like machinery that can’t afford maintenance—you run it until it breaks, then patch it up just enough to keep going.
5. Shame becomes a constant uninvited companion
The shame of poverty isn’t just about not having things. It’s deeper, more insidious. It’s pretending you’re not hungry when friends suggest dinner out. It’s making excuses for why you can’t come to the wedding (the real reason: you can’t afford a gift or appropriate clothes). It’s the hot flush of embarrassment when your card gets declined for a £3 purchase.
I became an expert at hiding my situation. “I’m doing a minimalism challenge.” “I’m on a special diet.” “I’m taking a break from social media.” Each lie designed to mask the truth: I couldn’t afford to participate in normal life.
Wealthy people might experience embarrassment, but they don’t know the particular shame of poverty—the way it makes you feel like you’re failing at being human.
6. Planning for the future becomes impossible
When someone suggests you should invest or save for retirement while you’re choosing between rent and food, it feels like they’re speaking a different language. The future becomes a luxury you can’t afford to think about when today requires all your resources.
I’ve mentioned this before, but watching friends from home struggle while London boomed taught me how differently we experience time horizons based on our bank balances. My wealthy friends planned careers, invested in pensions, discussed five-year plans. Meanwhile, I was trying to survive until Friday.
7. Help often comes with hidden costs
Well-meaning wealthy people often offer help that isn’t helpful. “Just move somewhere cheaper!” (With what deposit?) “Go back to school!” (With what money, and how do I eat while studying?) “Start your own business!” (With what capital?)
Even genuine help can hurt. A friend once offered to lend me money, but the shame of accepting, the weight of owing, the fear of not being able to pay it back—these emotional costs were almost as heavy as the original problem.
8. The system isn’t broken—it’s designed this way
The revelation that hit me hardest was understanding that poverty isn’t a bug in the system; it’s a feature. Those overdraft fees that trigger when you have the least money? The way benefits systems trap you in impossible situations? The jobs that keep you busy but never pay enough to save? These aren’t accidents.
My father, who worked in a factory and got involved in the union, gave me my first education in how power works. But experiencing poverty firsthand taught me how that power operates at the granular level—through systems designed to extract maximum value from those with the least to give.
9. Recovery leaves scars that never fully heal
Even now, years after climbing out of that hole, I can’t shake certain behaviors. I still check my bank balance obsessively. I hoard non-perishable food. I feel guilty buying anything that isn’t strictly necessary.
The fear never fully leaves. Every unexpected expense triggers that old panic. Every economic downturn makes me wonder if this time I won’t recover. Success feels temporary, fragile, like something that could evaporate at any moment—because I know it can.
The bottom line
These aren’t things you can understand through empathy or education. They’re not accessible through imagination or even careful observation. They’re lessons written into your nervous system through lived experience.
This isn’t about making wealthy people feel guilty or claiming moral superiority through suffering. It’s about recognizing that poverty and wealth create fundamentally different relationships with reality itself. Until we acknowledge these gaps in understanding, every conversation about inequality, every policy proposal, every well-intentioned intervention will miss the mark.
The distance between rich and poor isn’t just measured in pounds and pence. It’s measured in entirely different ways of being human.











