Being rich while sick beats being poor while sick 100 million times. The amount of money determines the quality of doctors, treatments, and care can you receive. Money means you can hire help at every step of the way to make things a whole lot easier. The stress of not having money makes illnesses worse. Money means doors that are closed shut for most will open for you. Money means options, opportunities, social opportunities, power, confidence, and just real big things that determine your quality of life, even while sick, especially while sick.
I am someone who was neglected and malnourished growing up, i suffer from multiple chronic illnesses that are high maintenance and dimish quality of life drastically. I am also quite poor, having just enough financial support from family to stay alive. Forget quality of life, I struggle just to buy the right food to properly nourish my body. Having lots of money can literally transform my life experience. Fk anyone rich who say money doesn't matter, give me all your money and I'll believe you, but only you.
Ok, fair enough.
Again, as I've stated above though, let me actually repeat it again here:
Also, the word 'privilege' can have a very broad range. Would a middle-class also be called 'privileged', in the eyes of the lower-class? Then again, the middle-class people can look at the upper-class people as being 'privileged'. This is also based from my own personal experience.
I admit that I was born from the middle-to-just-slightly-upper class family background, but still not the "crazy rich" upper-class one.
But now, due to many financial/business mistakes that my dad kept making, we're now kinda stuck tbh in middle-to-lower class position/situation now, which I admit, even I myself have felt tremendous loss & lack of opportunities & freedom, from where I used to be when I was much younger and "life was still happy as a privileged/spoiled kid".
The saddest thing is now my youngest brother got a chronic pain of coccydynia (coccyx/tailbone area pain), since his car accident in 2017, which makes him can't sit down, & in pain, & can't do much in his everyday's life. And it's very frustrating of how after many treatments etc etc, his tailbone/coccyx pain just only getting worse. But now, since our family's financial situation is also not as good as back then when we were much younger, even we're now confused & feel 'trapped' by the expensive medical/doctor treatments, even to just go to the nearest country (Malaysia/Penang) for allegedly better medical treatments. We've spent so much money on his chronic pain, but it's all without any good results. It's frustrating, stressful, & frankly, depressing for me & my family/parents.
So yeah, even I myself have often got envious of those 'richer' (upper-class) people, whose money seems not to be a problem/issue at all, so they can just go travel overseas anywhere to check-up & got their best medical treatments (which is why I also agree with
@LastFlowers 's comment above, because I also feel & think exactly the same).
But you see,
that's actually my point too, on my comment above: so where is the fine line on determining who is the 'privileged' one?
I mean, even I admit that I'm
probably already quite 'privileged' enough, but yet, I know that I'm still NOT 'privileged' enough too like all those richer people (or especially all those "crazy rich" people). You get my point?
So yeah, even *I* can sometimes feel 'guilty' for thinking that my life is already quite 'privileged' (or even 'spoiled' enough in my 'comfort zone'), but yet, I also still feel envious tbh of my 'richer' friends, or cousins, etc etc etc, whose again money doesn't seem like much of an issue for them, and therefore it makes their lives much more easier for anything.
i agree. it's silly to me when musicians/actors complain about their lives. i know that privilege comes with its own set of problems, but if i could have a career where i can express myself creatively like they do and get a LOT of money for it, my heart would never feel empty. i think sharing your unique talents with the world is the ultimate purpose, and the ultimate privilege.
Yet you see some celebrities, actors, & 'successful' musicians
still ctb/killed themselves.
Like I've always said repeatedly on this forum:
Anything can happen in life, even the most ironic, tragic, or even the most 'ridiculous/stupid' reasons that people finally choose to ctb/suicide. So what can
you even do about it? Nothing.
Depression (& suicide) can happen to
everyone. Not just the 'poor' people (again, I've argued about this on my comment on the previous page. I've given real example/proof of how here in my country (Indonesia), although still a developing country, with a lot of poor people, yet our happiness index is still quite high, ironically, compared to even the developed countries eg: Japan, Korea, and yes, even 'first-world' country like America/U.S).
So things are not as simple as black & white.