KIDS Issue 1016 · June 19, 2024

Riches to Rags  

When wealth drifts away, faith takes flight.Three families share the way their journey challenged them

Riches to Rags  
Rebecca’s Story

Over the years of our challenge, I resented it when people would say to me, “If your problem can be solved with money, then you don’t have a problem.” I don’t agree. So many problems come from having no money — relationships suffer; mental, physical, and spiritual health suffer. It’s never just about the money.

It was a combination of factors that brought us to our knees financially. My husband is an anesthesiologist specializing in interventional pain medicine — a field that uses procedures like injections and minimally invasive surgeries to manage pain — and I was a stay-at-home mom. My husband did well, and we lived an upper middle-class life in a classy neighborhood, with a beautiful home and a pool. Our five children were all in private school.

Then in 2008, a hurricane hit our South Carolina area, destroying many homes (thankfully, not ours). The base of my husband’s practice was elderly people who’d come down from the East Coast in the winter to get away from the cold. Now that their winter homes were destroyed, they no longer came.

There was also an economic downturn in the country that year, and since interventional pain medicine is a fringe practice, many people could no longer afford to pay for such treatment.

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