At Thanksgiving, My Niece Asked If I Was Poor
I always bring pie to Thanksgiving.
Pumpkin, from scratch, with the crust folded just the way my mother used to do it before arthritis took her hands. It’s the one thing I still get right.
This year, dinner was at my sister Caroline’s place. A big house on the outskirts of Des Moines — white columns, a long driveway, a porch swing that never squeaks. Her husband works in insurance; she runs a “lifestyle boutique” that sells candles that cost more than my electric bill.
When I pulled up, their driveway looked like a parking lot at a country club. SUV after SUV. My Corolla looked like it had wandered in by mistake.
Inside, the air smelled like cinnamon and turkey fat. Everyone was already there: Caroline’s kids, her in-laws, a couple of friends from her church. Everyone wearing those matching sweaters that say Thankful, Blessed, Gathered.
I handed my pie to her eldest daughter, who looked at it and said, “Oh, we already have three pumpkin pies, Aunt Lily. But thanks.”
So mine sat on the counter, uncut, next to the disposable flag napkins — the kind with the little stars and stripes, printed on cheap paper made in China.

Dinner started the way it always did — too loud, too polite. The men talked about football and gas prices, the women about new kitchens, Botox, and the importance of gratitude.
I mostly listened. That’s my role in the family: the listener.
Not because I’m wise. Just because no one ever asks me much.
Halfway through dinner, while everyone was laughing about something Caroline’s husband had said, my niece, Emma — nine years old, red curls, braces with glitter bands — turned to me and asked, clear as a bell:
“Aunt Lily, are you poor?”
The table froze for a heartbeat, then burst into laughter.
“Oh my god, Emma!” Caroline gasped, dabbing her eyes with her napkin.
“Kids say the darnedest things,” her husband chuckled.
“Don’t mind her, Lily,” said my brother-in-law’s mother. “They don’t know what they’re saying.”
Everyone laughed again. The sound was warm and bright and cruel in that thoughtless way laughter sometimes is.
I didn’t laugh.
Emma blinked, confused, glancing from face to face.
“I just meant,” she said softly, “you don’t have a big house or—”
Caroline cut her off with a nervous chuckle. “Okay, honey, that’s enough.”
But I looked at the little girl and smiled, gently. “It’s alright. She’s asking an honest question.”
I put down my fork. The turkey suddenly felt like sawdust in my mouth.
Was I poor?
Technically, yes. I make $43,000 a year teaching second grade. My rent takes half. My car’s fifteen years old. My winter coat is older than Emma.
But I’ve never thought of myself as poor.
I thought of myself as… surviving. Managing. Doing what teachers do — give what’s left of ourselves to other people’s kids, then go home and heat soup from a can.
So I said, quietly:
“Yes, Emma. I guess I am.”
No one laughed that time.
Caroline’s husband cleared his throat.
“Oh, come on, Lily,” he said lightly. “You’re just modest. You could’ve gone into administration. You chose to stay in the classroom. That’s on you.”
“That’s on me,” I repeated, nodding.
Then I looked around the table — at their gold watches, the engraved wine glasses, the table runner that probably cost more than my week’s groceries — and added:
“I suppose gratitude’s easier when you can afford it.”
The silence that followed was heavy enough to make the chandelier hum.
Someone’s fork clinked against a plate.
Emma’s face went red. She looked like she wanted to sink under the table.
Caroline forced a laugh — the kind that trembles on the edge of embarrassment.
“Oh, Lily, don’t be dramatic. We’re all grateful, aren’t we?”
No one answered.
I glanced at the flag napkins again — red, white, and blue little squares, folded neatly beside our plates. The kind you buy by the hundred at Walmart, “Proudly American.”
They were spotless, untouched.
And suddenly, I couldn’t help thinking how perfect they were:
The flags we wipe our hands with before throwing them away.
The meal went on, thinner than before.
Someone turned the conversation to football again. Someone else opened another bottle of wine.
Emma didn’t say another word. She kept looking at her plate.
At one point she whispered, “I’m sorry, Aunt Lily.”
I squeezed her hand under the table. “Don’t be. You just asked what everyone else was thinking.”
After dessert — none of my pie, by the way — I went outside to my car. The air was sharp and cold, smelling faintly of woodsmoke. The houses on the street were all lit up in warm gold, identical and safe.
I sat behind the wheel for a while before turning the key. Through the window, I could see them moving inside — Caroline laughing again, her husband pouring drinks, the kids chasing each other around the island.
I used to envy that life. The security. The noise. The belonging.
But watching them through the glass, I felt something different this time: pity.
Because gratitude, I realized, isn’t something you perform in matching sweaters once a year.
It’s what you feel when you have less — and still believe it’s enough.
When I got home, I reheated a slice of the pie I’d brought.
The crust was a little too thick. The filling too sweet.
But it was warm. It was mine.
I ate it at my little table, with a thrift-store candle flickering beside me.
And as I wiped my mouth with a paper towel — plain white, no flags — I thought of those napkins again.
Little flags on disposable paper. Evidence of how we celebrate abundance without understanding it.
I folded the towel, placed it neatly beside my empty plate, and whispered to the quiet apartment:
“Happy Thanksgiving, America.”