Jake, David, and Sarah
Jake works in HVAC. Good trade, steady demand. He shows up, does the work, comes home exhausted. Three months behind on rent. His truck needs a repair he can’t afford, and without the truck, there’s no work. He sold most of his furniture last year. When his buddy forced him to come out for a beer, his buddy paid. Jake hated every second of it.
David has the college degree his parents helped pay for. They believed in the promise that education opens doors, and they wanted this for him. Now he’s 34, working contract jobs with no benefits, moving between gigs that pay $19 an hour after a year of searching. His mom fell last month, broke bones, and the medical bills are piling up. He can’t help. They won’t ask. Everyone knows his situation is worse than theirs; at least they have a house.
Sarah works full-time at a job with actual benefits, which makes her one of the lucky ones. She still chooses every month: bills or food, rent or car insurance. Her relationship ended last year when the money stress became too much to carry. She logs into social media sometimes and sees people her age buying homes, getting married, having kids. She’s happy for them. And something in her chest stays tight and heavy.
Their parents’ lives were built under one economic math; theirs are unfolding under another.