RE: https://mastodon.art/@petrikas/116125821528139989

Middle class kids like me can get one throw every decade maybe. I’m about to throw a dart again.

I’m aware lots of things had to have happened for me to even be able to do this. Primarily that my parents without college degrees experienced a once in a lifetime economic growth story in a country that suddenly became rich in their lifetimes. And that I have a passport that lets me go anywhere i want.

And unlike many other middle class kids in my country with almost exactly the same life and financial situation, I also have more darts because

Not having to be financially responsible for my parents (because they are economically comfortable without me) is a huge gift they gave me. I give them money for fun but it’s not like many of my friends who have to keep their own family and their parents and siblings fed.

I also went to schools surrounded by people with lots of darts and have learned that I can take theirs sometimes. Many of my classmates even owned dart factories.
I also had parents who told me I deserve to have as many darts as I want, which is also exceptionally rare for an autistic and female presenting person in my society.
Also I grew up Chinese in a society where that basically makes me white. In many ways. It would be very different somewhere else. I had no qualms asking people for money at any point in my life including when I was young and relatively inexperienced.
@skinnylatte Oh, super intrigued to hear you say that confidence in asking for money is a white people thing. Made me reflect on my upbringing which was 'aspiring middle class' i.e. educated but very poor. We didn't talk about money at all, and when I started to specialise in program design and funding applications I had to work through A LOT of yucky feelings about asking for money. I was 'working the fairground' to use your striking metaphor.

@onekind let me add another layer: in a lot of places, to "play darts" you need to "pay the entrance ticket for the fair". So that way you get, for example people
who can't afford to study
studying on a loan because they don't have every requisite for a scholarship
on a scholarship
Paying full tuition without much problem.

So many systems are "you pay half and the system pays the other half". Subsidies to buy cars. Tax breaks for mortgages. And so on. There are SO MANY things you don't access if you can't cover your half.

@skinnylatte

@laguiri @skinnylatte vouchers *shudder*

A very American way of giving the middle class extra darts