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What the Poor Say
The Good Life and the Bad Life
Being well means not to worry about your children, to know that they have settled
down; to have a house and livestock and not to wake up at night when the dog starts
barking; to know that you can sell your output; to sit and chat with friends and
neighbors. A middle aged man in Bulgaria.
A better life for me is to be healthy, peaceful and to live in love without hunger.
Love is more than anything. Money has no value in the absence of love. A poor older
woman in Ethiopia.
Poor people were asked to share their ideas of good and bad experiences of life,
"wellbeing" and "illbeing". To be poor was to experience illbeing in
many ways, and to suffer multiple disadvantages that reinforce each other and interlock to
trap them. Again and again, the psychological dimensions of wellbeing and illbeing were of
paramount importance.
Wellbeing was variously expressed as happiness, harmony, peace, freedom from anxiety,
and peace of mind. In Russia, people said, "Wellbeing is a life free from daily
worries about lack of money"; in Bangladesh, "to have a life free from
anxiety"; in Brazil, quality of life is "not having to go through so many rough
spots" and "when there is cohesion, no quarrels, no hard feelings, happiness, in
peace with life." In Nigeria, "wellbeing is found in those that have peace of
mind, living peacefully"; in Bolivia, "quality of life is high when you have a
family, to feel supported and understood. You can have money but without a family
its worth nothing"; in Thailand, livelihood was simply defined as
"happiness"; "It is to be filled with joy and happy. It is found in peace
and harmony in the mind and in the community." For many, too, spiritual life and
religious observance were woven in with other aspects of wellbeing. The importance to poor
people of the church, mosque, temple and sacred place was repeatedly evident from their
comparisons of institutions, in which these frequently ranked high, if not highest, as key
supports in their lives.
Illbeing was described in terms of lack of material things, as bad experiences, and bad
feelings about the self. In Bosnia, the poor described illbeing as follows: "Children
are hungry, so they start to cry. They ask for food from their mother and their mother
doesnt have it. Then the father is irritated, because the children are crying, and
he takes it out on his wife. So hitting and disagreement break up the marriage." A
group of young men in Jamaica ranked lack of self-confidence as the second biggest impact
of poverty: "Poverty means we dont believe in self, we hardly travel out of the
community
so frustrated, just locked up in the house all day." Poor people spoke
about loss, grief, anguish, worry, over-thinking, madness, frustration, anger, alienation,
humiliation, shame, loneliness, depression, anxiety and fear.
Next: What Makes the Good Life |
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