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Nashville, circa 2010?
Twice in my first month in Nashville, I’ve heard the city referred to as a place “where no one goes hungry.” The reason? The Music City’s abundance of soup kitchens.
Assuming there’s truth entwined in that statement, lefty-leaning webzine
Salon has some bad news for us…
Salon has a new life-in-a-recession personal essay series called
“Pinched.” The second story is of Heather Ryan, an educated woman who, when the cupboard was bare, took her three kids to a soup kitchen for a hot meal.
Ryan has a master’s and a full-time job, not your stereotypical broke woman. But a divorce brought her down. And the mounting costs of everyday living—food, gas, daycare—forced her to seek out the kind of free handouts we associate with the terminally poor.
It’s a story that, unfortunately, could become more common as the shape of the economic downturn continues to reveal itself. Even in a city like Nashville, where the foreclosure crisis that's turning other cities into ghost towns has largely been avoided, the tightening of purse strings is unavoidable. And it's not a stretch to think that Ryan's precipitous fall from middle-class life could happen to a lot of people here, the city where no one goes hungry.