Monday, September 19, 2011

'Trust Fund Baby' from Riley Anderson (via Robin)


Trust Fund Baby
A few weeks before coming to the U, I went to an outdoor concert in Shakopee with my two friends. One of them is black, the other is half black, and I’m so white that you can go blind if you look at me too long. We stopped at a gas station on our way back, and a guy was selling perfume out of the trunk of his car. I was sitting in my friend’s car because I was too sunburnt to move and my two friends were putting gas in the car. The man, who was also black, approached my two friends and asked them if they were interested. After they said no, he looked at me and then said to them, “What about trust fund baby over there? She’s got to have a bunch of daddy’s money to spend.”  Coming from a little redneck town up north with 500 people, it’s not too often that you are judged for being white. I was friends with all the black people at my school. All two of them. That was the first time that I ever encountered any sort of judgment based on my race. I was surprisingly okay with it because I knew that I am anything but a trust fund baby. I spent my early childhood in a trailer in a town of 100 people until we moved to the big city of Deerwood after my parents split up. We moved into a house right next to the Deerwood trailer park. All of the money in my bank account has come from two and a half years of making Blizzards and ice cream cones at Dairy Queen.

 Trust fund baby is defined as follows,
“1. A young person whose parents are wealthy and have set up a trust for their son or daughter. The trust fund ensures that the child will be taken care of financially for life. 2. Not Riley.”

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