Articles tagged with: hunger challenge
Hunger Action Week and the Hunger Challenge have certainly captured attention in Seattle and King County. Hundreds of people are taking the Challenge and sharing their experiences. There has been push back as well. There were some tweets about free food being offered at a Panda Express on the east side and a few participants may have partaken of the free fast food. The Challenge has been called “poverty tourism” and “not like real life”. Of course it’s not real life. And this is…
Yes. It is possible to eat for $7 a day (that’s the maximum food stamp benefit for an individual, by the way). But chances are, if you have really, truly followed the rules of the Hunger Challenge you are starting to worry. You worry that you may not have enough food to get you through the next two days.
Note: I saw a tweet from Larissa Long that said, “As a former single mom of low income, I’m a bit offended by #HungerChallenge posts w/ complaints about giving up lattes & organic food.” I responded, and after chatting for a bit, I invited Larissa to share her viewpoint on our blog. Here is her guest post.
I couldn’t pay my bills. I was a single mother of two children, one with a disability. I longed to qualify for food stamps.
That was…
On day 2 of Hunger Action Week, Publicola’s Erica Barnett wrote an opinion piece that called the Hunger Challenge an insensitive and distasteful exercise in “poverty tourism.” She writes:
“There’s something off-putting about watching privileged people play at being poor, and it isn’t just that their complaints amount to whining about five days without $12-a-pound coffee and $9 sandwiches from the Dahlia Lounge. It’s that ‘living on food stamps’ isn’t the same as actually being poor. People in poverty lack many advantages besides the
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KING 5 traffic reporter Tracy Taylor has been participating in the Hunger Challenge, and in her video blog today, she says that she’s getting a lot of flack on Twitter for complaining about not being able to buy coffee and playing at being poor.
“Poverty is a serious thing. It really does happen everywhere,” she says. “It could be your neighbor. It could be your co-worker. It could be maybe your little boy or little girl’s friend who lives down the street.”
“Seven dollars a
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As we head into the third day of Hunger Action Week the community is abuzz about the Hunger Challenge. Many people are questioning whether the Hunger Challenge is a gimmick, if it makes poverty look easy or if people taking the challenge are just whiners who can’t go a week without a latte. This type of conversation – the dozens of e-mails, blog posts, comments and tweets – is exactly what Hunger Action Week is all about.
As we wrap up day two of the Hunger Challenge I would first like to congratulate everyone who has made it this far. It’s not easy, I know. And guess what? It gets harder, or at least it did for me when I participated in the Hunger Challenge two years ago.
Why? I got bored.
By buying larger quantities of inexpensive foods like pasta and soup, I saved a lot of money on groceries. Of course that meant I had to eat the same thing…
KOMO News reporter Heather Reese went out to Woodinville to learn about one of the projects being supported by Hunger Action Week, Farms for Life. “Fresh produce is the hardest thing for non-profits to get their hands on,” she learns so Farms for Life was created in 2009 to make it easier. Read the full post on KOMO News here.
“I’m going to have a drink of water. I hope I don’t have to pay for it!” – CJ, Magnolia Prep
Day one of the Hunger Challenge is about adjustment and will. Adjustment to the lack of whatever constitutes your “one of these and I blow my budget” guilty pleasure. The will is not to cheat and indulge in said guilty pleasure because, “who would know?” This morning I woke up to blue skies and, in a bit of serendipity, Mr. Blue Sky by E.L.O.…




