My definition of middle-class
I remember the moment that I formed my definition of middle-class.
As a child, I was visiting a friends house.
In the living room, they had a television. And that television lived inside a cabinet.
They had bought that television because it worked out cheaper than renting, and they had the upfront cash to do so.
Some of my friends families also had a car. With a car, they were able to get to the cheapest supermarket, The large ones that they just outside the town. Mum and I sometimes took the bus to the big Sainsbury’s and going there is not too difficult. But coming home with the extra large haul of shopping to take advantage of the special trip, you’re carrying and pulling a large amount of groceries back up a little hill to a bus stop because there’s no pedestrian route to the Sainsbury’s, onto the bus and then you’re holding onto it during the bus journey and then you’re hauling it home from the bus stop. So it’s not that we couldn’t use a large out of town supermarket it was just not as comfortable.
And that was my definition of middle-class; people that had everything they needed to make their lives comfortable.
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