How I Made It in New York City Without Parental Help

Posted

Like just about every young woman with an internet connection, I have been watching HBO’s series “Girls” with a mix of hope and terror. I read one writer’s response to “Girls” on LearnVest; she identifies with the show, and says everyone she knows has received financial support from their parents.

But I’ve had a different experience.

While I definitely relate to the main character’s experience of coming to New York as a young grad and being offered “jobs” that are just unpaid internships with no promotion potential, I find the show’s assumption that there is no other way—aside from parental supplementation—to make it in the big city galling. After all, there’s one question that no one is asking: What if the issue wasn’t that Hannah’s parents wouldn’t give her money but that they couldn’t?

It’s frustrating for me to see the adult-child “I still take money from my parents, but I’m self-righteous and it’s okay because I’m an artist” mentality perpetuated on TV. After all, I managed to make it in the city without any family money to help me out.

My Start to Big-City Life

I arrived in New York shortly after graduating from college in 2004 with a BA in English Literature (which everyone told me would be worthless). I was looking for work in book or magazine publishing, preferably as an editorial assistant; it took me eight months to find a full-time job as an administrative assistant.

If my parents had offered to pay my rent, I wouldn’t have been too proud to say no, but that wasn’t possible. My family lives in Raleigh, North Carolina. My dad’s job is in computers and my mom is a homemaker; they love me but didn’t have extra money to spare.

I did get lucky in one big way: zero student loan debt. Thanks to a combination of scholarships and an on-campus job, I managed to escape from a public university in my home state of North Carolina without any loans. But that’s where my smart money decisions ended for a while.

I had ideas that I wanted to be a writer, and that I had to be in New York. My parents thought I was going to waste all my money in a big, scary city, and I knew it would be tough to stand out when I didn’t have any contacts or connections … but I also figured if I didn’t go for it when I was 21, I never would. I would rather be a New York failure who had to come home than someone who never tried.

I spent most of my senior year hoarding the money I earned from my campus job, but when I left for the big city, I still didn’t have a huge cushion. My parents drove me to the airport, waved goodbye and told me I could have my room back whenever I wanted.

A Rocky Beginning

My first apartment was definitely a humble abode.

For two years, I lived in a Brooklyn building built illegally on a commercially zoned block, wedged between two factories. Four of us lived in an apartment designed for two, with railroad-style bedrooms. We often barged in on each other while sleeping, reading, having sex. The post office refused to recognize our address or deliver mail. Crack deals sometimes took place on our stoop.

My rent was $500 a month, due in cash. Since I was unemployed at the time, I came up with that $500 by teaching SAT prep classes, temping and maxing out a credit card. There was usually enough left over to cover some groceries, a MetroCard, my share of the utilities and the occasional thrift-store sweater.

When there wasn’t enough, or when I got drunk and decided that, despite my negative bank account, I needed those tacos, I took out cash advances on my credit card. In total, I dug myself into a $2,000 hole.

How I Turned My Poverty Into a Book Deal

Poverty, as Ernest Hemingway pointed out in “A Moveable Feast,” is a great motivator for an artist.

My first job was as an executive assistant at a media company. Although I was happy to have a job, my constant worry about being broke didn’t disappear. Though all assistants were paid $26,000 a year, there was a clear line between those who supported themselves on that paycheck and those who used it to supplement the money they got from other people. One was being supported by a wealthy older boyfriend, and several had families who paid their rent or other living expenses.

The remaining few of us who were fending for ourselves would meet in an empty conference room at lunch, eating our brown-bag sandwiches and complaining about how much better it would be if we were also spoiled. After one assistant got a lecture from her boss about wearing cheap shoes, she came over to cry in my cubicle.

I worked my way up from administrative assistant to editorial assistant, and up the ladder until I was the editor-in-chief of a website. The jobs got increasingly better, but that first entry-level one eventually paid dividends: The sense of confusion and bewilderment I felt around office politics inspired me to launch a blog called Save the Assistants. It gained a following and eventually became a book, “Save the Assistants: A Guide for Surviving and Thriving in the Workplace.”

Finally Making Financial Progress

I paid off my credit card and eventually realized it was okay to upgrade my life because I was debt-free and finally earning enough. I ditched my roommates and moved into another apartment on a better block. My room even had a door.

Although I’m more financially secure now, I’ve never fully shaken that feeling of perpetual panic from my broke days. Today, eight years out of college, I still buy most of my clothes from eBay and stay in hostels on vacation.

If my parents were supporting me, I would have quit the moment someone did something mean like lecturing me about buying more expensive shoes. But then I never would have learned workplace coping skills, and I definitely wouldn’t have thought to create a website where assistants could connect with each other. And that wouldn’t have led me to the success of getting my book published.

Where I Am Today

I got a decent advance on my book, but it actually came around the same time I was laid off from a job, in 2010, so the financial impact wasn’t as great as it could have been; it also meant I didn’t qualify for unemployment and had to live off the advance instead of saving it.

Last fall, I finally quit my job to become a full-time freelancer, and I love it. It was terrifying at first, but I didn’t leave until I had a few regular clients in place. I earn slightly less now than I did when I had a full-time blogging gig, but I am also able to write off a lot more of my expenses (for example, part of my apartment is an office), which helps balance everything out. I budget carefully because, as a freelancer, some months are better than others. Nowadays, I pay my credit card bill in full every month, and still eat boxed mac ‘n cheese sometimes. (What? It’s good.)

Although the protagonists of “Girls” are women, I find that their reliance on help from others keeps them suspended in adolescence. The main character, Hannah, isn’t just immature about money; she has trouble advocating for herself in a bad relationship and wrecks a job interview by making unprofessional jokes.

Remaining financially dependent on her parents keeps her from needing to fully grow up. Although I wonder how I ate so much mac ‘n cheese without turning neon orange during those early years, I also look back with pride in myself and my work. If I hadn’t done jobs I hated, I probably wouldn’t have found the one I love.

Though I didn’t know it then, I was laying the foundation for the rest of my adult life.

You know what I’d watch? A show called “Women.”

  • Emma B.

    This is an inspiring article. In many ways being bailed out and having my income supplemented by my parents in my early 20s hampered the drive to take bold steps in life. It’s only now that I no longer feel OK asking for their financial support that I am taking control of my business skills and money management. It’s scary but it feels empowering. Sometimes helping young adults financially is the worst thing you can do for them in the long term.

  • Mariacruz85

    AMAZING Article! I did the exact same thing last September. Was tired of living in Tampa after undergrad sold everything to my name and landed at La Guardia Airport with all of 4 suitcases. Not once did I ever ask my parents for a penny. Now 8 months later I have not only a full-time job but also a part time and have all my financial issues resolved :) I would never change that experience for the world. I just wish more 20 somethings would take a risk and see that they can also can make it without mommy or daddy’s help! 

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/SVX44DAXS4VMXZKBZJKK7DS5RA metalmaiden

    Great article. I have very similar feelings and beliefs but I thought maybe I was turning into just a cranky old lady.
    Glad to hear this from the present generation and it reinforces that I am being a good mom by encouraging my twenty something kids that they need to do it on their own (with encouragement and occasional words of wisdom–which they generally ignore at first, then come to appreciate).

  • Paula

    I admire the author’s ability to struggle and make it, but I think some people are missing the point with Girls.  Hannah is a deeply flawed character and we are supposed to see that, not hold her up as a model.  The show is sort of like a Woody Allen film – it is both critical and sympathetic at the same, holding up a mirror to the character’s selfish and blind behavior, but forgiving them because we are all flawed in some way.  

    I don’t think you can spend so much time worrying about what others have that you don’t have.  On this point I am reminded this clip of Henry Rollins (a former 80′s rocker) telling young people to “avoid resentment and pursue success”: 

    http://www.openculture.com/2012/05/henry_rollins_tells_young_people_to_pursue_success_with_a_monastic_obsession.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+OpenCulture+%28Open+Culture%29  

  • Brenna

    The whole point is that it’s a showed called “Girls;” they’re immature, and obviously depend on others for support. If you want to watch a show called “Women” about strong ladies overcoming adversity and patting each other on the back, that’s what Lifetime is for. 

  • http://twitter.com/KT_HUTCH Katie Hutchinson

    Amazing story!! Sounds just like me, although I moved to NYC when I was 18 to go to college and “make it big” in television, acting, writing – SOMETHING.  Here I am at 25 still looking for “that job” but I do not regret a thing.  I have been 1000% independent and self-sufficient since the age of 18, and although I hope that I am able to help my kids out a little when they are in college, which my family could not do, I think it really does mold a person.  I still have nightmares of not being able to pay my rent and my bills on occasion, but my two jobs now cover my bills and still leave me with some fun money, so I sleep easy most nights.  

    Lastly, since I am CURRENTLY still an assistant by day, I will definitely have to pick up your book.  Good luck with everything!

  • Kathleen Pagan

    You are super!  I am 30 years in to doing it on my own with no financial support and I wouldn’t have it any other way!  My journey started after high school and because of that my 20 and 21 year old sons are now 2 and 3 years into THEIR journeys too!  I would watch “Women” too….since we are already living it the scripts should be easy to write!!  :)

  • Ankemper

    Thank you so much for sharing your story. Finally, someone I can relate to!

  • Chantelle J Shick

    This really is a great story, but my parents have NEVER helped me since I moved out at 18 and I still absolutely love the show “Girls”. It’s so funny. It’s infuriating when your friends whose parents support them diss what you are wearing or ask why you can’t afford to go skydiving… What’s even more frustrating is when you have a better job than anyone you know, but have the least to show for it because everyone has mommy and/or daddy helping them, it makes you feel like garbage.  

    I would love to be able to support my future kids, but in a way I think it destroys them. 

  • Ddelisser

    Nice piece.  Some of the experiences in this article are very reminiscent of the stores we heard from or about our parents/grandparents who were immigrants – landing in a new country with little money and not even a common language to start a new life.  Yet, they made it – and were, in many ways, became our role models for the self-respect and gratitude one can gain by working hard and defining the life you want to lead in the world.

  • kat

    I praise you for sharing this because it reminds me that there you can make it on your own. Most success stories include that little caveat- I came in to money, or a parent or relative helped me out- but for those of us who don’t have help, it is nice to know there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and even that you can be beyond stable but successful!

    The narrative of “girls” who rely on others is the most frustrating thing to watch, and the inability of many to appreciate that some of us don’t have that cushion will never stop puzzling me.

  • Lcgregg

    If you watch the show, I think that you may realize that “Girls” is actually in line with this article. Hannah lost parental financial support and is now forced to start growing up. Her mother even offers to give her some money and Hannah refuses. This show seems to be about the mistakes that one might make and adventures one might have while attempting to make it in NYC without parental help. I think the premise of the show is about how Hannah is learning to stand on her own two feet and how that influences the other decisions she makes in her life. The first episodes had to establish how flawed she was so that we, as an audience, can watch her grow, stumble and grow some more.

    • Henry

      I really disliked the show at first but I now see it as you do. How else can we see a character grow unless we first see them at their worst?

  • Guest

    I can definitely relate to this article too. When I moved to the city, also in 2004, to make it on my own, I was surrounded by peers who were being supported by boyfriends and parents. I expected to meet other people supporting themselves, like me, but surprisingly I didn’t. It was definitely a struggle at times, but it built my confidence over the years knowing I was doing it on my own and now I have a career in a field I am passionate about!

  • Guest

    HERE HERE! Finally someone who shows that not all Generation Ys are spoilt and parent subsidized, and how astoundingly many of them are in debt from college and otherwise. Thank you for writing this.

  • alyssa8715

    I honestly don’t find it at all inspiring when an adult (over 18) supports herself without assistance from relatives. I have been paying half my parents’ mortgage since I was 21. I live in the Bronx. I also have student loan debt, despite working two jobs in college and graduate school, due to sending my family money. I can’t move out (I’m 24) because my parents would become homeless if I did.

    The fact that anyone over 18 feels it is some sort of accomplishment to support herself annoys me as much as that television show annoys someone who does support herself. 

    • guest

      Alyssa, you are inspiring!

    • kelly

       Agreed!

    • Carys

      I’m sorry you feel that way. Your experience is obviously not Lilit’s and it definitely isn’t mine. I’m 26 and moved in & out of my mom’s house twice since I turned 20. The first time, I quit my job to live with my then-fiance. Did that for 9 months, but it didn’t work. We broke off the engagement and I had nowhere else to go, so I moved back home. I moved to a friend’s house 3 winters ago and I haven’t been back since. I cannot live at home anymore because of personal reasons.

      The fact that I was able to support myself enough to be able to live away from home is enough of an accomplishment for me. Your attitude is dripping with ego. You are no better than me, Lilit, or anyone else just because of the choices you’ve made. I’m guessing you make great money with a grad degree, so why couldn’t you send some money to your parents and move into an apartment? I don’t know about you, but I can only stand my family in very small doses. I live by the old saying, “Family are like fish. After 3 days, they start to stink.”

      • alyssa8715

        I guess the point is that Lilit (and you) are not inspiring to me, just as someone who relies on her parents is not inspiring to Lilit. The entire article was about her judgment on those who don’t rely on themselves. 

        • Psi Inc

          The bigger question alyssa8715: “Are you inspired by anything meaningful and worthwhile?”

    • Psi Inc

      You should wear your honor & character with pride, not bitterness. Stay strong, all your hard work will come back to you.

  • alyssa8715

    I honestly don’t find it at all inspiring when an adult (over 18) supports herself without assistance from relatives. I have been paying half my parents’ mortgage since I was 21. I live in the Bronx. I also have student loan debt, despite working two jobs in college and graduate school, due to sending my family money. I can’t move out (I’m 24) because my parents would become homeless if I did.

    The fact that anyone over 18 feels it is some sort of accomplishment to support herself annoys me as much as that television show annoys someone who does support herself. 

  • alyssa8715

    I honestly don’t find it at all inspiring when an adult (over 18) supports herself without assistance from relatives. I have been paying half my parents’ mortgage since I was 21. I live in the Bronx. I also have student loan debt, despite working two jobs in college and graduate school, due to sending my family money. I can’t move out (I’m 24) because my parents would become homeless if I did.

    The fact that anyone over 18 feels it is some sort of accomplishment to support herself annoys me as much as that television show annoys someone who does support herself. 

  • Ejwynegar

    A great story!

  • Ejwynegar

    A great story!

  • Ejwynegar

    A great story!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/katie-ferrari/43907774 katie ferrari

    Thanks for sharing your experiences, Lilit! I haven’t seen Girls (and can’t say I’m very interested in watching it, based on the subway advertisements), but I can really relate to your experience. 

    I graduated with a Bachelors of Fine Arts (another “useless” degree) a year ago. I moved out of my parent’s and into a 4-person loft in Bushwick last December. My room had about a 5′-6″ ceiling and no windows, but it did have a door. (I’ve since moved in with my boyfriend and we share a studio apartment). In February, I found an amazingly cheap studio space in Bushwick to paint in. I support myself by a variety of part-time jobs and freelance design and writing work. Panic is always around the corner, but knowing that I’m surviving on my own and working towards my goals is an amazing feeling.I’ve been able to do this without asking for support from my parents for a few reasons. (1) No debt. My parents refused to co-sign on a loan when I wanted to go to “real art school” after high school, so I went to CUNY on a full scholarship. I hated it at the time, but in retrospect, I’m so grateful. Monthly loan payments would probably be the cost of rent for my apartment and studio. I get really angry thinking about what a scam higher education has become and how many of my friends are saddled with debt. I don’t know if I’ll ever go to graduate school. (2) I’ve been saving since I got my first job at 16. I’m excited to put what I’ve learned on Learnvest to use and start investing for my future. (3) I record every penny I spend and earn. I also shell out the money for an accountant so I can make sure I get every tax deduction I’m eligible for. 

    • ranavain

       That’s one thing I’ve heard… that hiring an accountant is almost always worth the money, unless you have really simple taxes.

    • Robi

      Good for you for going to CUNY, and good for your parents for saying no to the private art schools.  I got a decent education at Pratt, but because I’m $60k in the hole, I can’t afford a studio space.  Now my degree is useless for sure!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/katie-ferrari/43907774 katie ferrari

    Thanks for sharing your experiences, Lilit! I haven’t seen Girls (and can’t say I’m very interested in watching it, based on the subway advertisements), but I can really relate to your experience. 

    I graduated with a Bachelors of Fine Arts (another “useless” degree) a year ago. I moved out of my parent’s and into a 4-person loft in Bushwick last December. My room had about a 5′-6″ ceiling and no windows, but it did have a door. (I’ve since moved in with my boyfriend and we share a studio apartment). In February, I found an amazingly cheap studio space in Bushwick to paint in. I support myself by a variety of part-time jobs and freelance design and writing work. Panic is always around the corner, but knowing that I’m surviving on my own and working towards my goals is an amazing feeling.I’ve been able to do this without asking for support from my parents for a few reasons. (1) No debt. My parents refused to co-sign on a loan when I wanted to go to “real art school” after high school, so I went to CUNY on a full scholarship. I hated it at the time, but in retrospect, I’m so grateful. Monthly loan payments would probably be the cost of rent for my apartment and studio. I get really angry thinking about what a scam higher education has become and how many of my friends are saddled with debt. I don’t know if I’ll ever go to graduate school. (2) I’ve been saving since I got my first job at 16. I’m excited to put what I’ve learned on Learnvest to use and start investing for my future. (3) I record every penny I spend and earn. I also shell out the money for an accountant so I can make sure I get every tax deduction I’m eligible for. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/katie-ferrari/43907774 katie ferrari

    Thanks for sharing your experiences, Lilit! I haven’t seen Girls (and can’t say I’m very interested in watching it, based on the subway advertisements), but I can really relate to your experience. 

    I graduated with a Bachelors of Fine Arts (another “useless” degree) a year ago. I moved out of my parent’s and into a 4-person loft in Bushwick last December. My room had about a 5′-6″ ceiling and no windows, but it did have a door. (I’ve since moved in with my boyfriend and we share a studio apartment). In February, I found an amazingly cheap studio space in Bushwick to paint in. I support myself by a variety of part-time jobs and freelance design and writing work. Panic is always around the corner, but knowing that I’m surviving on my own and working towards my goals is an amazing feeling.I’ve been able to do this without asking for support from my parents for a few reasons. (1) No debt. My parents refused to co-sign on a loan when I wanted to go to “real art school” after high school, so I went to CUNY on a full scholarship. I hated it at the time, but in retrospect, I’m so grateful. Monthly loan payments would probably be the cost of rent for my apartment and studio. I get really angry thinking about what a scam higher education has become and how many of my friends are saddled with debt. I don’t know if I’ll ever go to graduate school. (2) I’ve been saving since I got my first job at 16. I’m excited to put what I’ve learned on Learnvest to use and start investing for my future. (3) I record every penny I spend and earn. I also shell out the money for an accountant so I can make sure I get every tax deduction I’m eligible for. 

  • guest

    “Although the protagonists of “Girls” are women, I find that their
    reliance on help from others keeps them suspended in adolescence…Remaining financially dependent on her parents keeps [Hannah] from needing to fully grow up.”–so true!!  I moved to NYC in my early 20′s and had a similar experience.  Out of nearly all my friends, I was the only one who didn’t have financial help from my parents. Now I am in my 30s and doing pretty well.  Those same friends are still trying to figure it out.

  • Guest

    I love this!

  • B.C. Ashmall-Liversidge

    I’m a New Yorker & was on my own at 17.  I got married that year and had my oldest son a year later.  My first husband left a year after that.  Most I’ve my life I’ve managed somehow to pay the bills, for myself and my family.  When that son was 18 and not going to school and not working, I drew the line.  I was not paying his bills any more.  He moved out and for the past 10 years has been paying his rent and bills all on his own.  My daughter has just finished college and while I will help with her college loan bills(if she needs the help) that’s all I can manage with another still in college and a 6 year old at home.  I am not at all sympathetic to those who say they can’t manage.  Most of them are in consumer debt because they want to live above their means.  People need to adjust their expectations and act like grown-ups if they want to get anywhere in this world.  I did it, my son did it and now I expect my daughter to do so.  What kind of mother would I be otherwise?

  • Allison Killen

    This article is so inspiring. I hope all the young adults who are spoiled and live off of their parents money open their eyes and see that if they don’t ever take full responsibility, they will never grow up.

  • Jaqouia3

    Bravo!  You are a wonderful example of ‘standing on your own two feet’. I am proud of you, and I hope my own daughter is bold  and ambitious enough to follow your example.

  • Kgal1298

    You were incredibly lucky not to have that student loan debt and you actually graduated I didn’t even have that, but thank god I’m self reliant and I was able to land in a good position especially being in a city like LA where they tell you to head “home” more often than stay. 

  • http://twitter.com/Smecksie Melanie Carek

    I love this! I am inspired and I really respect you for your hard work towards your aspirations. Before I turned 16, I was spoiled. My dad gave me pretty much everything I wanted. Horses, cars, money to invest in stocks. My father is a self-made, successful business man and I totally took advantage of the freebies. Life was so easy! I couldn’t wait to grow up! Now, I am 25. When I graduated high school, he put a $5,000 down payment on a brand new car for me. I had to pay off the rest with my job, and this was my first really big “responsibility”. It was hard. So, so hard. I was NOT used to that. The job I had at 16 supported my party after school lifestyle, not for paying any sort of bills. At 18, I moved out. WHAT A HUGE AWAKENING! My father owned a hotel, so I was able to live there for free for 6 months, but had to work many departments and was on-call pretty much any time of the day. Which is fine, I was young and rearing to do it. But, I got sick of it and moved out and that’s where the even bigger reality struck. I got myself into debt just from living expenses. I had no idea how to budget. I was shopping, eating out (sushi every week!), Starbucks etc… I maxed ALL of my three credit cards, fell behind on my car payments and was eventually unable to make my car payments. 

    Now that is all on my credit report. Eventually, my dad moved to WI and bought a house, so I moved back in with him and was able to sort of save money… and I say ‘sort of’ because I SHOULD have, but didn’t. I wanted a horse. So I bought one and I am sure you can see where this is heading. Into debt again. Borrowing money from my dad to pay it off. Anyway, what I am trying to say is that I have LIVED that life you talk about where these girls do not learn how to grow up. And it wasn’t until I was 22 that I really started to take a seriously look at what I was doing to my future. I was paying for clothes still that I didn’t even own anymore. I am 25 now and still paying off those debts, but I am SO close to having none that I am proud of how far I have come. Spoiling your children is the WORST thing you can do for them. I look back at my reckless spending and it makes me sick. Literally, sick to my stomach. I hate to think where I could be if I had learned sooner what my actions would mean for me. I know now and I am glad my dad lit the fire under my a** so to speak, even if it was just a little match. And after all of that debt accumulating I did over the years, I somehow managed to bag a man who is way more financially savvy than I and has helped me make better decisions. Between him and Learnvest, I think I’m pretty well of for a bright future… financially. :)

  • andrea

    not necessarily inspiring because this is what i think it means to be an adult – to take responsibility for your decisions.  but this was a refreshing read.  i am glad to know that there are responsible women out there.

  • LVvisitor

    It’s great to be proud of what you’ve accomplished, but don’t judge others for their experiences.  Just because someone is helped financially doesn’t make their life or experience less important or successful than anyone else’s.  It’s important to feel proud, but also important to feel proud without having to compare your situation. Some people never get the chance to be an executive assistant or get an advance on a book deal, but that doesn’t make you better or worse than anyone else.  Be proud for what you’ve accomplished, because I do think it’s wonderful, but do it without judgement of others.

    I don’t think the show “Girls” is meant to inspire, but meant to connect with our generation in different ways.  It’s about living in NYC, going to parties with your friends, living with roommates, etc. Try not to focus so much on the financial aspects of the show and enjoy the comedy. 

    • Psi Inc

      Clearly this is a girl who is not mature or financially independent. Her defensive nature to hearing about a smart, hard working and ambitious women is all too common.

  • MaddieDiBi

    Love this – one of the few articles I’ve read on LearnVest that is both pragmatic and inspiring.

  • Amber

    Lilit, great article – way better than the other one LV published in regards to that show! Thanks for sharing. Yes, it’s not big news that you often have to suffer and learn to be self-reliant to become a financially fit woman, but the shocker is that a lot of women don’t. Instead, they just let credit pile up and try to lean on others. That’s why this article is inspiring. I love reading articles like this.

  • anthonysmom

    Finally – an article that celebrates being independent, taking care of yourself instead of relying on family or the government…BRAVO to the author!!  What an inspiring story – I hope & pray that you continue to make wise decisions and that your audience continues to grow!

  • Di

    I really, really enjoyed this article. I was wondering, Lilit, what advice would you offer someone quite like yourself then, with a background in English and who aspires to write in New York City, in this current economic climate? How have things changed since you moved in 2004? Or, have they not?

  • Amanda

    Lilit, this article was so refreshing to read! I am literally the only young person I know in my social circle who is not able to rely on her parents for financial help. Like you, I had to be completely financially independent both through college and now as a young adult my early career.

    In school, this meant that I had to wait tables at night and study for class afterward into the wee hours of the morning. I was also a journalism major, which meant that sometimes I had to take an F on an assignment I simply could not report on because I needed to wait tables that night instead. So many of my professors and career counselors recommended I simply just “work at the restaurant less” if I approached them about alternative assignments I could report on if I couldn’t make it to an assigned class event held in the evening outside of normal class hours. They truly didn’t understand that I was completely reliant on myself for food, shelter,everything.

    I now also have some high credit card balances that were the result of taking low-paying PR gigs and supplementing my lack of income with credit.

    But, I wouldn’t take any of it back. Without relying on anyone else, I was forced to quickly contemplate what kind of career I wanted and exactly what it took to get there- and now, I can happily say I found exactly what I want in a career.

    I’m not (and I know you’re not either, Lilit) saying that people who do have financial help from parents or otherwise aren’t ambitious or career-focused. It’s just that sometimes being completely reliant on oneself at a very young age feels so scary and intimidating when you’re in your late teens/early 20′s, but once you look back on what it’s taught you, the experience shapes your views on money, relationships and life in ways you never imagined were possible.

  • JennX

    Thank you for writing that! Galling is precisely the word to describe such poor little rich girls’ sense of entitlement and lack of maturity.  However, the adult-child scenario is so common of late that I had started to feel alone in having to buckle down and do whatever it took to realize my ambitions.  It’s nice to see that some people writing for this web site have dealt with adversity (other than self-created – which seems to be the theme) and sacrificed to get what they want like I’ve had to do.

  • JennX

    And by the way, congratulations!

  • Guest

    I’m really failing to see what’s so impressive about all this.

  • http://twitter.com/kingrichard24k Rich C

     DO YOU miss Raleigh? Would you go back and work there in your same feild?  Cary ,Nc is so laid back  and nice !

    • terrimerritts

      Anyone would have to be insane to leave the culture in New York to go to anyplace in North Carolina where it is socially and culturally backward. NC is sexist, homophobic, and can’t hold a candle to NYC for culture and opportunities. 

      • AD

        Also racist in some parts. I have family there.

      • NC-to-NYCer

        Wow, do you actually have any experience with NC? 

  • http://twitter.com/kingrichard24k Rich C

    would you go back to Raleigh? if you found a job doing what you are doing . do you miss Carolina?

  • http://twitter.com/kingrichard24k Rich C

    You are a very strong Woman ! Wow  whats your sign you are agressive ! and an adventurer!

  • Sig

    A show about women making smart choices in new york would be dull as dirt. Good for you for making the most of your finances and learning how to be an adult, but you might want to step down from your high horse. The show is not intended to promote the idea of living off your parents as long as you can. It is a story about growing up and learning to be an adult. The characters are still trying to figure out how to be self sufficient and how to be adults in all aspects of their life. This process takes longer for some people, especially for those who know they have family to fall back on.

    • LeAnne

       Why is having a support system an excuse for bad decisions?  The “girls” in the show are adults.  There are other ways to learn about life than taking it “one mistake at a time.”  The idealization of females who consistently make bad life choices is sickening. Here’s an idea: think before you take action, and you might have fewer regrets! 

      It is ridiculous that someone who has made it on their own is accused of being on her “high horse.” 

    • terrimerritts

      Why would anyone want to watch a show with a bunch of grown women who are silly, stupid, and irresponsible as well as highly immature and whiny? A show about women making smart choices in NY would not be dull. There can be a wide variety of experiences to show that can involve women whose IQ is higher than their shoe size. 

  • LeAnne

    Bravo!  It is fantastic to hear a story about someone who is determined to make it on their own.  I love that you took responsibility for your own future.

  • Julie C

    I had a similar experience after graduating from college and making it on a totally different coast from the rest of my family during the Silicon Valley bust around ’99.  In the end, I was way too proud to ask for help or move home (to NYC, ironically).  My dad had always talked about putting himself through school (he grew up poor), so it was just something I felt I had to prove – and my parents had always instilled in me a sense that no one owed me anything and that it what happened was up to me.  I slept on a lot of couches, futons, and for a while even lived out of my office (out of total necessity since I didn’t have a car, and once I got a car, I spent some time living out of a car…)  I shopped at thrift stores, learned how to patch my own clothing, and bought plastic furniture off of craigslist.  I am uber-thankful for that experience because it taught me to have a lot of faith in myself, and that no matter what dire situation I find myself in, I can get myself out with my own bare hands and wits.  Even once I “made it” earning a 6-figure-salary (and graduated away from plastic furniture), I felt nostalgic about the confusion and struggle that made my values very clear to me.  I was really proud of the path I’d built for myself.  In fact, I just made another career transition into the arts – a field that pays very little (as in, below poverty level), and where most people are at least 10 years younger than me.  Although it’s challenging to start all over again, there is something that is really exhilarating about being able to prove that you’ve got what it takes to make it anywhere.  And that I get a chance to do something I love – that always makes me feel richer than gold!

  • Made community

    thanks for speaking the truth. i too did not have parents that were able to financially support me, so my financial mistakes and my success has been 100% mine. i understand how a budget works and the value of a dollar. it’s good to have family support you, but being spoiled is not doing our society a favor. loved the article (i still eat mac and cheese occasionally too- i upgrade to annie’s organic once in awhile for the extra 50 cents!)  

    • The People’s Flowers

      You go girl! I’m in the same situation. Yet I’m going to have to buckle even when I make it and move to an other city. I need my own space like my own car, home,, etc. Too crowded and beyond too rude here

  • Gars

    Smart people learn from their mistakes; wise people learn from other’s mistakes.

    The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.

  • JoR

    I thought you were very broad when speaking about how you actually made it in NYC.

  • Guest

     so you made it in new york without parental help by living with roommates in a crowded apartment on a questionable block in a questionable neighborhood, and ate brown bag lunch. SHOCKER.