The Korea Times

Student’s fear of future makes every day struggle

- By Abigail Van Buren

DEAR ABBY: I’m frightened that I will become homeless and won’t be able to pay my bills. I’m afraid of getting older and ending up a homeless woman, freezing to death on the streets. I worry that the college degree I’m working toward will be useless.

I’m accused of being a cheapskate, but I’m terrified I will never have enough. While other people see possibilit­ies and adventure, all I can see is a homeless death on the streets.

I struggle every day to find a reason to get up. I distract myself with simple goals: go to class, finish homework, get a college degree, and then get some kind of job.

When you’re a single gal alone in this world, the melancholy begins to seep in. I ask myself, is this life worth it? What is the point of getting up day after day knowing that when I graduate from college there’s nothing ahead of me but a life of constant bills and misery? — EVERYDAY STRUGGLE

DEAR EVERYDAY STRUGGLE: It has been some time since I have seen a letter filled with as much negativity and depression as the one you have written. One of the benefits of being in school is you have access to the student health center. I URGE you to go there and talk to a counselor who can help you cope with your fears before they become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Decades ago, President Franklin D. Roosevelt said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself — nameless, unreasonin­g, unjustifie­d terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance.” This applies to you. We all have moments of doubt about what’s to come, but when fear about the future destroys the present, it’s time to seek profession­al help.

DEAR ABBY: Twenty years ago, I inherited eight place settings of china that belonged to my great-grandmothe­r. I had no place to display it, so I carefully wrapped each piece in newspaper and put them inside a plastic tote.

When I moved into my current apartment five years ago, my mother was helping me unpack, and we wanted to put the china set in a cupboard above the refrigerat­or. When we started unpacking, we found many of the pieces had become stained from the ink in the newspaper.

My mother and I are heartbroke­n. My great-grandmothe­r collected each piece of this set with Green Stamps during World War II, and I hate that it’s now damaged. Do you know of a way I can safely get this staining out of the china? — HEARTBROKE­N IN MINNESOTA

DEAR HEARTBROKE­N: I researched your question at HowToClean­Stuff.net and found several suggestion­s for removing newsprint stains from dishes. One involves using a pencil eraser; another, a cotton ball soaked in rubbing alcohol. However, if you are afraid these methods could further damage your china set, call the nearest art museum and speak with someone in their restoratio­n department.

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