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Biggest Challenges



 Different people had different reasons for failing the challenge. In nearly every case, it was an
 unexpected expense that put them over their budget, but those expenses fell into several different  categories.







 The tricky areas included the following:



                 Transportation. Schakowsky says “a big chunk of her budget” went to-  ward a 140-mile car trip for her granddaughter’s birthday party – even
                 though she counted only the cost of gas and not maintenance or insu-  rance. Mbanusi writes that he started buying just $10 worth of gas at a
                 time, rather than filling his tank, and a $24 bill for routine maintenance  nearly wrecked his budget for week one. And Strickland describes sho-
                 wing up late for a meeting because he had to walk from his apartment
                 – in 90-degree heat – rather than taking a cab.



                 Food. Nearly everyone who took the challenge says eating healthy  food was a problem. Only a few say they actually went hungry, but  most
                 say their diets were less varied and less healthful during their mi-  nimum-wage week. Strickland says he couldn’t afford most fresh fruits  and
                 vegetables and had to rely heavily on cheap staples like bread, bo-  logna, bananas, and peanut butter. Schakowsky reports that she and  her
                 husband “stretched a package of romaine and a few tomatoes to  last the week.”


                 Health Care. Mbanusi says his budget went off the rails in week two  when he had to pay $40 for a doctor’s appointment he’d made weeks
                 earlier. Ryan notes that the first big stumbling block in his week was a
                 $25 charge for vitamin D drops and a few other items for his newborn  baby. Strickland, in an interview on the left-wing website ThinkPro-
                 gress, says he was lucky to have medicine at home when
                 he caught a cold early in the week; otherwise, he says, “I don’t think I  would have been able to buy that Afrin nasal spray.”



                 Kids and Pets. For Ryan, the expense that finally knocked his budget  off track was his 10-year-old daughter’s summer camp. Schakowsky
                 says she learned that “pets are luxury,” as one of her biggest expenses  was caring for her dog Lucky, who is disabled.
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