By Isaac Fox â24, guest writer
As a senior in college, Emily Long stood in her elementary school cafeteria, watching the people who taught her childhood self English and math sprint from table to table.
They formed make-believe families and exchanged make-believe money, but there was nothing make-believe about their frustration and franticness. They were struggling through a poverty simulator, and she was leading it. For the moment, she taught, and they learned.
âItâs kind of funny,â she said. âBut then youâre like, this was actually hard, and if this was not a single 45-minute-or-whatever period of my lifeâŚ. And some of them were like, âYes, Iâm a teacherâa teacher, within this district, who lives on the borderline of poverty, and this is just a lot.â So I hope there were a lot of realizations like what I had, that this is a reality for people who probably live next door or in my neighborhood.â
Emilyâs own realization came while volunteering in the healthcare field. Working with Habitat for Humanity and the Sexual Assault Resource and Counseling Center in Lebanon, she has encountered people with life stories completely different from her own, even in areas barely outside her hometown. Some face medical âdeath sentencesâ because of factors like class or immigration status. One woman who Emily met had struggled with addiction and homelessness her whole life and was in hospice at age 50.
Talking to people in such desperate circumstances is never easy.
âItâll test you,â Emily said.
Itâs emotionally difficult work, but itâs also a cultural shift that can force anyone to confront their own ideas. Emily believes that everyone deserves healthcare, no matter why they need it. In some roles, sheâs met people who society blames for their problems, and sheâs had to remind herself of her values.
âI think that drug addiction is a mental health condition, and I donât think that itâs a personal failing,â she said. âBut it is one of those moments where you say, âOkay, in this room somebody has cancer, and in this room somebody has drug addiction, and they feel like they should be two different things. And you have to reaffirm that, âListen, I think that everyone gets healthcare.ââ