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Once-prosperous family struggling on the edge
The Dallas Morning News ^ | Aug. 18, 2003 | SHERRY JACOBSON

Posted on 08/19/2003 10:33:27 AM PDT by new cruelty

DALLAS - (KRT) - Standing on a street corner in Coppell, Texas, last winter, Sheila Wessenberg questioned her sanity as she turned desperately toward a line of cars, held out a coffee can and prayed that someone would drop money in it.

"There is just no other way," she remembers telling herself. "This is what you've got to do."

A suburban mother of two, Wessenberg breathed in exhaust fumes, dodged impatient drivers and netted $13 that day. When she ran into the nearby Tom Thumb to spend the money on potatoes, milk and coffee, she says it felt as though everyone in the grocery store was watching her.

"Of course, they had just seen me out there on the corner begging for money so people were curious about what I was buying," she recalls. "The store seemed much quieter than normal. It was like something cosmic happened to me. It was so weird."

Desperation can be a disorienting journey when you've always lived a middle-class life.

Wessenberg, 44, says she resorted to panhandling because there was no other way to feed her children after her husband lost his job. But her desperate act may be something more - a sign perhaps - that the so-called American dream is going seriously awry for some families.

"It just got really, really bad," she recalls – until it got to the point where neither she nor her husband was sleeping anymore.

"We'd gotten to the point where we were living on credit cards," recalls Bob Wessenberg, her husband of almost eight years. "That's when you know you're pretty near the bottom. When the credit card bills catch up to you, you're done."

So swallowing her pride, Sheila Wessenberg spent eight Sundays last winter panhandling on suburban street corners. She got good enough at it that she netted about $15 an hour, just enough for groceries.

What her donors couldn't know was that the smiling woman - toting a can labeled "Not a bum. I'm a mom, please help" - had been through hell before she planted herself on that street corner.

In the previous year, Wessenberg had been diagnosed with breast cancer. After her husband lost his six-figure job, she had to stop chemotherapy treatments. There was no way the family could afford health insurance when the premiums jumped to $837 a month. Her doctor gave her 18 months to live.

"More than once, I asked God, `What did I do to deserve this?'" Sheila Wessenberg says.

Public begging was a last resort in a long and painful process of dismantling their previous life. First, they liquidated his pension plan and cashed in their stock portfolio. Then they moved out of an expensive condominium in Las Colinas, Texas. And, finally, they sold off nonessentials such as her fur coat and jewelry, any furniture with value and even their washer and dryer.

Friends and family did what they could, say the Wessenbergs. But there was nothing, short of a good job, that would stop the family's downward spiral.

"It just breaks your heart watching them go through all this," says her close friend Tonya Perrine. "Sheila is the strongest person I've ever met."

Sheila Wessenberg's mother and six siblings have tried to be supportive from afar, sending money when they had it, visiting whenever possible.

"We'd love it if Sheila would move back here," says her mother, Sheila Sabbagh, who lives on Staten Island in New York City. "But things have changed since she left here 14 years ago. And we know that Sheila loves being in Texas. She won't give up on what she wants. She is quite a fighter."

A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., Wessenberg says she is resisting the temptation to return to New York City with her family. She worries about being forced to ride in the overcrowded subway again and live in claustrophobic conditions. Whatever comfort her husband and children might derive from being near other relatives would be diminished by such a dramatic culture change, she fears.

"The quality of life in Texas is much better," Wessenberg says firmly. "We just have to hope that the next time that phone rings it will be a job that turns all this around."

There have been some high points in the months of struggling to keep food on the table. In the midst of her panhandling effort, Wessenberg shared her family's story with a San Francisco freelance writer, who was compiling a book about 41 uninsured Americans - a group meant to represent the 41 million people in the United States who have no health insurance.

In the book, "Denied: The Crisis of America's Uninsured," author Julie Winokur wrote that "the Wessenbergs are running out of time and options." (The book was published in April and is available online at talkingeyesmedia.org for $10.)

The family's hard-luck story was plucked from the book, along with photographs showing Sheila Wessenberg panhandling, and was published in The New York Times Magazine on Feb. 9. Almost immediately, the Wessenbergs were inundated with phone calls of support, cards and letters containing cash and the promise of larger donations that would cover their house payments and other bills for a time.

As wonderful as the outpouring was, it forced the Wessenbergs to acknowledge how desperately they needed the money. "I've never asked for charity before. That's a fact," Bob Wessenberg stresses. "It's not a good feeling. But sometimes, there are no options."

Along with money, well-wishers sent groceries, clothing and toys. A Canadian company offered free chemo drugs if Sheila Wessenberg needs to take them again. And someone anonymously sent a new washer and dryer to their house.

Pretty soon, it was clear that the Wessenbergs were basking in their proverbial "15 minutes of fame," complete with the couple's appearance on the "Today" show in March. Asked on national television if she would panhandle again if her family needed money, Sheila Wessenberg responded: "You bet. To save my family, to go out and feed my kids, I sure would – in a heartbeat."

While she hasn't gone back to panhandling, it is not because their lives have returned to normal. In fact, six months after the national publicity about their plight, the Wessenbergs are still heavily dependent on the generosity of strangers.

"We saved our house," Sheila Wessenberg says of their now caught-up mortgage payments. "The American public has come to our rescue in a major way."

But the generosity of strangers has not eased Bob Wessenberg's desperate search for the kind of job that would stabilize the family's situation. Each month, it seems, he lowers his expectations as he applies for every possible opening, including sales positions at local retail outlets.

Despite repeated phone calls, nothing promising has materialized.

"They read my resume and they figure if they hired me, I'd be gone in three weeks if something better came up," says the long-time computer programmer, who is certified to operate Lotus Notes, software used by businesses for messaging and document sharing.

But there are glimmers of hope. Bob Wessenberg signed a two-month contract in June to provide computer support at TXU Corp. "We can tread water as long as the contract lasts," he says. If the contract is not renewed, however, he will again be looking for a job.

It would be easy to blame the economy for his lingering unemployment. But Bob Wessenberg's fears go much deeper. He's worried that he has reached an age – 52 – that means snagging a well-paying permanent job with full insurance benefits may no longer be possible in his field.

Although he's well groomed and physically fit, Wessenberg doesn't try to disguise his graying hair. He wonders if his appearance automatically eliminates him from competition with younger workers.

"If they're looking at a guy who's 52 years old and wants a full-time job," he says, "and a guy in his 30s or 40s, it's tough to get anyone to listen to you."

While Wessenberg has landed a series of temporary jobs, usually earning between $11 and $14 an hour, they don't come close to paying for the comfortable life the Wessenbergs once knew, or even the scaled-down version they've been living for the past 18 months.

Although the Wessenbergs were able to buy a small house in Coppell a year ago with no down payment, they can afford to use the air-conditioning only sparingly and have learned to ignore the serious repair work the house needs. Last winter, they scoured the neighborhood for tree limbs to burn in the living-room fireplace, instead of using the furnace. They cut corners at every conceivable financial turn.

"I can now feed a family of four for $1.50," Sheila Wessenberg says with her usual blend of pride and humor that has cushioned the family's fall from the middle class.

For her part, Wessenberg works one day a week doing payroll records for a local company and spends most of her time taking care of 3-year-old Alex, who suffers from autism, and his 6-year-old sister, Amy.

"I have a handicapped child that one of us needs to be with at all times," Sheila Wessenberg says, explaining why she has not sought full-time work. However, she will grab periodic temp jobs when she hears of them.

As to her own health, Wessenberg prefers to remain optimistic. She was alive and healthy in June - the month she could have died had her doctor's 18-month survival prediction come true.

But when she returned recently from a visit to Dr. Dennis Costa at the Lake Vista Cancer Center in Lewisville, she didn't feel as positive as she'd hoped she would. The long-awaited visit and tests, which were free under an arrangement by the nonprofit Bridge Breast Network, are inconclusive, at best.

"All the blood work came back normal," Wessenberg says. "But one of the scans found a spot on my lung and my liver. The doctor couldn't say if it was cancer, but I'll go back for another scan in September. We're hoping it doesn't mean anything."

So she went home from the doctor's office that day and washed her kitchen floor, trying to put the test out of her mind.

"My house is a mess, and I've got laundry to do," she says. "God doesn't take people who have housework to do. Somebody's got to do it."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: insurance; mediabias; medicaid; poverty; socialism
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To: new cruelty
While Wessenberg has landed a series of temporary jobs, usually earning between $11 and $14 an hour, they don't come close to paying for the comfortable life the Wessenbergs once knew...

And there you have it...

The story of the Ant and the Grasshopper comes to mind.

21 posted on 08/19/2003 10:48:35 AM PDT by ItsOurTimeNow ("The board is set. The pieces are moving. We come to it at last...the Great Battle of our time.")
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To: Porterville
And, I'm suppose to believe she has no family support anywhere in the USA??? Right.... Liberal lies ...

I can understand and appreciate your lack of sympathy. But is it your belief that everyone in the USA has family somewhere that they can call on?

22 posted on 08/19/2003 10:49:08 AM PDT by new cruelty
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To: new cruelty
Do you believe she just popped up in Dallas on her own like a plant???
23 posted on 08/19/2003 10:50:23 AM PDT by Porterville (I hate anything and anyone that would attack the things that I love...)
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To: Protagoras
Local radio guy Jerry Agar did a similar thing and was actually able to get several of these people to come on the air with him to talk about how much money they make and what methods they use. All of them said it was common to make several hundred dollars a day and one of them actually quit a real job that paid well to do it because after taxes he was netting less working!
24 posted on 08/19/2003 10:50:47 AM PDT by Phantom Lord (Distributor of Pain, Your Loss Becomes My Gain)
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To: Porterville
Hardly. I am just curious about your comment.
25 posted on 08/19/2003 10:51:17 AM PDT by new cruelty
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To: new cruelty
Does anybody know how to save money for a rainy day? Her husband's six figure income should have prepared them a little better than this.
26 posted on 08/19/2003 10:51:26 AM PDT by AD from SpringBay (We have the government we allow and deserve.)
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To: new cruelty; Porterville
This women does have family to help her. She just doesnt want to move to NYC to be with them. As she said, the quality of life in TX is better than NYC and she doesnt like the crowded subway either.
27 posted on 08/19/2003 10:52:26 AM PDT by Phantom Lord (Distributor of Pain, Your Loss Becomes My Gain)
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To: new cruelty
"Wessenberg, 44, says she resorted to panhandling because there was no other way to feed her children after her husband lost his job."

They bought a house a year ago? They aren't too bad off.

28 posted on 08/19/2003 10:53:12 AM PDT by MEGoody
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To: Phantom Lord; Porterville
I understand she has family in NYC. I was just curious about Porterville's comment.
29 posted on 08/19/2003 10:54:03 AM PDT by new cruelty
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To: EggsAckley
I can't stop thinking that she is a made-up character in somebody's liberal mind.

This sort of story usually is. The times when it isn't just fabricated out of whole cloth, the liberal reporter has taken great liberties to present a picture that looks nothing like the truth.

30 posted on 08/19/2003 10:55:04 AM PDT by hopespringseternal
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To: new cruelty
I know I don't and didn't have family I could call on since my parents were no longer alive.

My husband contracted chronic lymphocitic leukemia and even though I had great insurance through my employer, we went through all of our savings, my 401k and finally had to declare bankruptcy. We weren't living beyond our means either.

I did an anywho look-up on these names and these people come up as listed.

31 posted on 08/19/2003 10:56:22 AM PDT by Sally'sConcerns (Don't mess with Texas!)
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To: new cruelty
My father moved here to America without knowing any English alone... he pulls real cash... I'm broke, I have no money and I'm looking for work while going back to school. Immigrant friends of mine are working in any jobs, friends of mine are prison gaurds who had no family to rely on and are making large amounts of money...

On top of that there are government programs to help people like this..

And your soft strategy to make me say something cold or crass won't work, I'm an A-hole to BS and this is BS, I've voluntared more time then you with physical labor and bodily harm than many. This story is a typical liberal red herring.

32 posted on 08/19/2003 10:56:35 AM PDT by Porterville (I hate anything and anyone that would attack the things that I love...)
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To: new cruelty
After about the third sentence of this article, I said to myself, "This woman has to be from New York City."

Sure enough . . .

33 posted on 08/19/2003 10:58:24 AM PDT by Alberta's Child
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To: new cruelty
Four points here: first, no one will be denied medical treatment if they need it. Hospitals legally MUST take on indigent care and its paid for by Medicaid or by other patients (or their insurers) through higher bills. Second, she's been given the option to move her family back to New York with her parents -- but won't take it because she likes Texas too much and doesn't like NYC. Well, I'd prefer living in Bermuda to Cleveland but if I could only find work in Cleveland, I think my choice would be made for me. Third, I was unaware that coffee was a necessity. Fourth, I always find it curious that these types of stories DISAPPEARED (along with virtually anything about homeless people, who magically must have ceased to exist) during 1992-2000, when the media's candidate was president.
34 posted on 08/19/2003 10:58:44 AM PDT by laconic
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To: Sally'sConcerns
Anywho? What is that?
35 posted on 08/19/2003 10:59:08 AM PDT by new cruelty
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To: new cruelty
Very odd story. Sounds contrived.

My sister lived in Coppell for a few years. It was a very nice suburb as I recall.

36 posted on 08/19/2003 10:59:58 AM PDT by PBRSTREETGANG
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To: Phantom Lord
There was a bum who used to work the street in front of my office building a few years back. His line to every passerby was the same, "tryin' to get a sandwich", "tryin' to get a bite to eat". One day, I broke all my rules and gave the guy a dollar as I went up to my office on an errand. As I returned about three minutes later I encountered him again, and he said the same thing again. I said, "Hey, I just gave you a buck three minutes ago!"

He shook his head and said "I gotta start writtin' this sh-t down!"

The guy had a certain panache. :^}

37 posted on 08/19/2003 11:00:17 AM PDT by Protagoras (Putting government in charge of morality is like putting pedophiles in charge of children.)
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To: PBRSTREETGANG
Yes, Coppell is a nice place.
38 posted on 08/19/2003 11:00:37 AM PDT by new cruelty
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To: AD from SpringBay
"Her husband's six figure income should have prepared them a little better than this."

Right. Maybe they wouldn't be in this mess if they had saved the money instead of buying furs and jewels. (And they probably should have moved out of that high priced condo just a bit sooner.)

39 posted on 08/19/2003 11:01:36 AM PDT by MEGoody
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To: Spruce
This is ALL GEORGE BUSH'S FAULT!

And Clinton's and all the free traders who believe Americans don't need jobs.

40 posted on 08/19/2003 11:03:28 AM PDT by FITZ
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