I was determined not to end up blogging about this but the vast amount of mono-reasoned, jab in the dark, blame-seeking comments I’ve witnessed concerning it has convinced me to offer up an intelligent counter-reasoning to a vast sea of other comments and also an answer to some of the underlying angst’s for some of the comments that I have heard.
So we have rioting…..but how did we end up here?
‘But those who crave to be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish (useless, godless) and hurtful desires that plunge men into ruin and destruction and miserable perishing. For the love of money is a root of all evils; it is through this craving that some have been led astray and have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves through with many acute [mental] pangs.’ 1 Timothy 6:9-10 (Amp)
POVERTY is the one word (in my opinion), that I think brings together every reason that people are giving as the catalyst for the riots being experienced right now up and down the UK. But I don’t mean poverty only in the financial sense. I believe that financial poverty can either be inflicted by the removal of privileges, or can be the manifestation of poverty that begins in the mind, which is secondary to poverty of the heart and spirit. Having said that, it is one thing when you’re poor in spirit to begin with, but it is another thing entirely when you are not poor (even if you’re not considered wealthy by society’s standards), but poverty is forced upon you as a result of circumstances beyond your control. This is why the poorest people in the UK who have been poor for generations and have no expectation of ever coming out of that poverty have not been seen rioting. They are like fish that have lived in caves with no light for generations and have consequently become blind. They are mentally poor, no longer able to see a way out, and so cannot get angry as they see no alternatives for life. They are financially poor; work menial, low paid jobs and survive from hand to mouth throughout their lives as their families have for generations. They are poor in spirit, do not put emphasis on gaining knowledge nor continue with education, they are numb to life and stuck in life, and although perhaps not happy, they are somehow content with their lot.
The Problem!
I am a foreign national and so therefore do not vote in the country, so I do not stand here with a political agenda. And I know it is very easy to sit and criticise the current government for tough decisions that they have had to make in their vision to rid the UK of billions of pounds worth of debt, accumulated by the previous government whose views on welfare reduced the majority of Great Britain to a state money-dependent, hand-out expectant nation so I am not here to wave an ‘I can do better even though I don’t have a clue about politics’ attitude about like a child with a chainsaw. But having seen the savage cuts made, the particular areas they were made in (affecting young people and middle/ lower/ under class families the most) and their results (sending people who are not poor into poverty they do not want nor are they conditioned for in their hearts and minds), I think it is safe to say there is some truth in what the majority of the public are saying. I think the public’s concerns about the cuts to child benefit and increased taxes that result in decreased income SPECIFICALLY for middle-class families where the parents are married needs to be heard, I think the public’s outcry on the rise of tuition fees that have made education only accessible to the upper-middle class families with very few children age-spaced out enough for two not to be at university at the same time and upper class/ aristocratic/ royal families need to be taken into some very serious consideration and I think that the lack of action in helping people move into careers they have invested thousands of pounds to, must be acted on. In my opinion these are the people whose children and who themselves have become disillusioned and disengaged enough to go out and criminalize.
And I know what some people will say to this, which is what I say myself…. “I am disillusioned with the government’s policies but I don’t go out and criminalise!” And yes while I wholeheartedly agree with the fact that going out there is a choice that not everyone makes and rightly so, I would remind people that although the condemnation of their actions is permissible, we should try not to judge those who do because in my opinion, people have different frustration thresholds and possibly are being affected much more than we realize. We must not forget that debt is the number one cause of suicides in the UK and financial problems have for years been at the top of the list as to why marriages fail. The lack of money in a country consumed by capitalism and materialism leads to immense misery that can drive anyone (including you reading this) to actions you would condemn. And we must remember that emotions are like water behind a damn, the pressure is great, must be sturdily harnessed and its release must be controlled in order for it to be beneficial and not cause destruction and devastation.
And on the topic of emotion….. I’m sure we’ve all lost our temper at someone at some stage of our lives and broken/ smashed something in the process. This is more common with men rather than with women but it is nonetheless an expression of frustration, even if not justified as valid by some.
What is going on also has nothing to do with race; it is a cause and effect thing. When the tuition fee riots were taking place, it was mostly Caucasian kids who went out on the streets because they form the majority of university students from middle-class homes where there are often an average of three children age-spaced close enough to make education inaccessible for them at fees in excess of £9000. And now it’s mostly African and Caribbean kids because they form the majority of the kids that had their EMA cut off and that can’t even dream of University anymore as their parents struggle to find £1000 to take the whole family on a sunny holiday every years let alone find the money for University. Needless to say it is a fair statement that having parents who cannot provide financially what the EMA used to cover, leads to those kids working, most of whom cannot juggle both their studies and hours often more than they’d like to do but have no choice as most workplaces present either a large amount of fixed hours or no job. What this does to someone’s University admission chances through a crucial time can only be sadly imagined as research has proven that full time study begins to be affected when more than 16hrs of employment per week is undertaken whilst studying. And so on goes the domino effect!
In addition to the financial factors, I am sure that most Black young people in London know someone who has been a victim of irrational racial profiling from which unfair actions such as aggressive stops, searches, arrests, beats and even death have been inflicted by a police force that by its own admission is ‘institutionally racist’. And as much as I appreciate the police saying that they search other race based victims also, in my sixteen years in the UK as a mixed raced person, half Black and half Caucasian with no bias towards any side, I have never heard of a Caucasian complaint regarding stop and search for no apparent reason yet this seems to be overly prevalent in the Black community.
Whatever the intricacies, whatever the ethnicity, they are rioting because they have come to the conclusion that they will not get listened to any other way. Proof for this was offered up by the Caucasian girls from Croydon bragging live on BBC news that they were involved and were planning further involvement in the riots and looting only to show the rich people, the police and the government that they can have stuff too, even if it meant stealing them. I DO NOT CONDONE AT ALL what these kids are doing but their wrong actions must still be looked at in the perspective of the trigger that pushed them to it.
The Consequences!
I know so many people who not only did a degree, but then a postgraduate course at red brick universities and universities famed for that course-only to end up working at retail stores and restaurants because they couldn’t get a job in their chosen field of work. I left Scotland fed up, after over 1000 job applications. I had a BSc Hons and an MSc, was accredited as a Junior Member with the APM UK and RICS and yet even McDonalds turned me down. I could have done all sorts to get by and to an extent I did (legally handing out flyers for club nights and working P/T at this dingy little cafe). I was even offered an escort job back in England by one of my CHRISTIAN friends who became so disillusioned about not being able to get a job with her Law degree that she became an escort, living a double life that her church friends to this day do not know about. Getting a 2:1 apparently wasn’t enough for all 50+ firms that she applied to and no one would give her a paralegal job or anything ‘lesser’ because they were convinced that she wanted to climb up and no matter how you got there, you couldn’t be at the top with anything less than a 1st. Another girl I knew was so desperate, she ended up in £55,000+ worth of debt and had to declare herself insolvent at 21 and now can’t even get a mobile phone contract. Needless to say I wasn’t ever prepared to sell my body or get high APR% credit cards I didn’t know how I was going to pay, not for a flat, not for clothes, not even to put food in my belly. And so back to my parent’s home I went-something I was slightly ashamed of but has now re-become the norm when young adults are through with university. In my research for writing this piece, I learned that it takes on average now over two years after a postgraduate degree to get a job in your chosen profession. So in that time, where will you sleep? And what will you wear? How will you keep warm? And what will you eat?
One doesn’t have to look so far from home to see the desperate acts of the young and their cries of injustice and dispossession. But it doesn’t have to be like this!
How did I go forward?
In the end, it took me 1753 job applications before I got my first ‘real’ job out of university (and yes I actually counted) and even that job was a twelve month contract that was not going to be renewed, only indirectly related to my chosen field of Project Management. Before that job I temped, and well let’s just put it this way-temping gives you about as much financial stability as putting your every asset into an investment bank in administration-you can’t expect that to pay your rent and bills! In the end, it was only because I taught myself how to use the indirectness of my first job to my advantage that I am now in the job of my dreams, looking to a very comfortable future, financially very secure, that affords me the option to send my children to schools where they are aligned with other children born into influence, and a lifestyle where they’ll never be frustrated enough at lack of money to end up vandalizing and looting on the streets.
Moving down to London to start my new job also saw me move in to my own place which considering the rental market in London, was possibly the biggest miracle of the year! It came with only sofas, dining table and seats and two beds and so everything else I had to put in myself, but to do this I had to wait for six months for my traineeship to end, for a pay rise and for a bonus. And so after what seemed like a very long wait, I recently furnished my apartment. When I was planning the furnishings, in my mind, I was trying to recreate the homely feeling I had growing up in our home which included a warm, embracing environment, one filled with integrity. So stealing to furnish my home or stealing to eat so I could use the other money to furnish my home would have violated that principle hence as bad as things got (eating next to nothing on paper plates and plastic cutlery that I would wash because I couldn’t afford to keep buying more), I waited patiently for my traineeship to end, for my pay rise and for my bonus. I worked hard towards that six month goal knowing that having to give nearly £4000 deposit (every spare penny I had) just to rent a place I could call home from now on would be worth it in the end. I knew that I was doing everything I could to make eventually furnishing my home the sweet feeling it would end up being.
I had also been tutoring since the age of eighteen and to this day, I still tutor high school, college and university kids because I am thrilled to contribute to their education and because I want to make sure I teach them the way I went and the art of persistence against all odds…..effectively ‘hustling’! I charge their parents £30/ hr because I am good at bringing those children into their future, academically and personally; and because after all I’m still maximizing my income potential too! I have also gotten a flatmate recently, to bring forward my desire to start a savings account and to do a one year P/T CPD course with Cranfield School of Management that costs £10,000, for which the funds clearly won’t grow on trees. Instead of waiting for my next pay-rise, I’m doing everything I can to take me into my future, now!
The Solution I!
One must always ask the questions behind the questions; I guess when I think about this, I think of French kids who have drunk wine at the dinner table since a young age. They never get drunk on wine because not only is it presented to them regularly, it is presented in the context of a nuclear family who sit, eat together, communicate together, love each other and enjoy each other’s company, sometimes in the company of family friends who also share in the same sets of values. So for them the thought of abusing drink is absurd because it amounts to the abuse of all the values that drink was presented to them attached to. So I guess with material possessions this principle still applies. If ‘things’ are presented to children and they are attached to wholesome values then when children grow up they will not want to acquire just for the sake of it, but they will want things based on needs that builds that same environment wherever they find themselves and this is the job of parents in our society.
‘But as for you….. of God, flee from all these things; aim at and pursue righteousness (right standing with God and true goodness), godliness (which is the loving fear of God and being Christ-like), faith, love, steadfastness (patience), and gentleness of heart. Fight the good fight of the faith; lay hold of the eternal life to which you were summoned and [for which] you confessed the good confession [of faith] before many witnesses. In the presence of God, Who preserves alive all living things, and of Christ Jesus, Who in His testimony before Pontius Pilate made the good confession, I [solemnly] charge you to keep all His precepts unsullied and flawless, irreproachable……….. As for the rich in this world, charge them not to be proud and arrogant and contemptuous of others, nor to set their hopes on uncertain riches, but on God, Who richly and ceaselessly provides us with everything for [our] enjoyment. [Charge them] to do good, to be rich in good works, to be liberal and generous of heart, ready to share [with others], In this way laying up for themselves [the riches that endure forever as] a good foundation for the future, so that they may grasp that which is life indeed…… guard and keep the deposit entrusted [to you]! Turn away from the irreverent babble and godless chatter, with the vain and empty and worldly phrases, and the subtleties and the contradictions in what is falsely called knowledge and spiritual illumination. [For] by making such profession some have erred (missed the mark) as regards the faith. Grace (divine favor and blessing) be with you all! Amen (so be it).’ 1 Timothy 6:11-21 (Amp)
The beautiful thing about the bible is that it contains a word for every season and the one above; I doubt could be added to by anything I say. So given that it addresses the attitudes that everyone in society including parents and children should adopt, I guess my last morsels of advice for youngsters wanting to get out of poverty, climb the social ladder and combine networking with knowledge to maximize their influence and gains can be summed up through the lens of my life, in the following point alone!
Life owes you NOTHING-but God wants to give you EVERYTHING!
‘The thief comes only in order to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have and enjoy life, and have it in abundance (to the full, till it overflows).’ John 10:10 (Amp)
The Solution II!
These are my bite-sized pieces of wisdom, based on my own life which has produced results. I live my life doing what I’m just about to recommend, cannot speak from any other platform and I hope this resonates with someone out there!
- Study at school like your life depends on it, because it does! In the three months leading up to your exams you should have a timetable, even if it is a rough one and you should use it to benchmark your study. In those three months I would recommend 12hrs of study, five days a week and then the weekend or another two days off to cool the brain down and hang-out with your friends, family and yourself. It is wise to begin studying before that three month period. Short term loss=great term gain! I did it and stand here without regret 🙂
- Get a good tutor! They are expensive, but if they are good they’ll be worth more than their weight in gold-especially if you need help to get the required grades for your course at the next educational level.
- Leave your friends alone-NO ONE will pass your GCSE’s, AS, A-Levels, Degree, Postgraduate or Professional Exams for you but you! Socialise but then again, the three month rule never fails. In the three months leading up to your exam, loose everyone but your seat, table and books.
- If you’re going to work whilst studying full time for any exams other than professional ones, don’t ever work more than 16hours a week irrespective of what educational level you are at and certainly give up working for the three months leading up to your exams because there are very few people I know that can work and say it hasn’t affected their grades and even then, there is never proof for that as you cannot go back and try the same exams again. There’s nothing like hindsight, but this doesn’t mean you should aim to use it as your sole view. Think ahead and prepare, it is better to eat just potatoes and pass, than to feast and fail, re-Sits don’t feel good, not even in Ralph Lauren! If you’re sitting professional exams, make anything outside of work disappear in the lead up to your exams to ensure you pull through successfully.
- Aim high! Choose the best school, college and university your grades will afford. Don’t make staying at home to save money or be close to what you know, your goal, because unsettling yourself from your church friends and learning how to be independent and build your own life is worth more than any amount of money can buy. Same principles apply with jobs, apply for the ones you’re qualified for but at a high level and don’t be afraid to ask for increased exposure to responsibility once you’ve arrived and have learned your role. Change is often dressed up in relocation, be it for a new School, College, University or Company…Embrace it!
- When you get to University, let the LAST thing you join be ACS. Check out the Young Entrepreneurial Society, Sports Clubs, and Debating Societies etc. The more you expose yourself to people, who are COMPLETELY different to you, the broader and consequently more employable individual you’ll be. And if you end up being the one employing people, you’ll make the best manager if you are able to understand people from varied cultures, demographics and walks of life. Not that it’s even just about employment; you just don’t want to be one of those people who have no real idea how to communicate with anyone who isn’t Black and from South East London! Understanding people brings you into places where you will be able to exercise influence over people of immense power whilst learning from them. You will then very quickly become one of those people and it pays-A LOT…I’m sure you get this gist now!
- A Student Loan or Career Development Loan for postgraduate courses is not of the devil and you need to know that you can be empowered to make financial decisions that your parents might not agree with at the time, as long as they’re sensible and are made ONLY to facilitate your positioning and journey to a career that will pay it off, that you feel God is calling you to. When I did my MSc International Project Management, one of my parents didn’t quite understand my decision. Safe to say when I’d landed this job and went to graduate the sun had set on that and the penny finally dropped-but I had gone through with it anyway! Get it and have a fabulous time, enjoy your course knowing that you are paying your own fees; it’ll probably be the first thing in life you pay that’ll cost you something significant. It should motivate you to make yourself the most you can be so that it’ll pay itself off before you know it.
- Apply for your University hardship fund and don’t be ashamed. I did and I qualified and they helped me out greatly. I applied without shame, every year and every year received hundreds of pounds and thanked God, without shame!
- Go to a new church where you go to University and if your heart is happy there, become a member. Make new friends, build a community and support network around you and remind yourself that home is now where you are, not where you came from. Do not keep running back to your old friends, your old church, your old job etc. Be planted, 100% where God puts you because that is the place you will flourish the quickest.
- Before October of each term, make visits to your University Careers Service and with their help, apply for as many summer placements as possible. Ask someone for help sprucing up your application if it doesn’t look like it belongs at the top of the pile. If your University does not have a Careers Service, use popular websites for graduates and students, student and graduate fairs etc-you can just find these on Google. Once you land that first internship, as long as you successfully complete it, the rest of them come much easier and so does the career you want when you leave University. If you get one early enough, they might even pay for your postgraduate course.
- Start looking into postgraduate courses once you start applying for you internships. Talk to people, call the universities, go see them and don’t dismiss relocating! As long as God is not giving you a red light, you can go, sometimes with speed and much oomph, sometimes with caution. But if you are not in a relationship that is looking imminently towards marriage or anything else God will hold you back for and if you can go, then go! Needless to say choose wisely, but somehow once you realise you’re paying for it all then Mom and Dad’s ‘Medicine’ choice that you don’t actually want to do or some washy degree that will get you nowhere all of a sudden drops off your radar. Church things still applies in the new place!
- Apply for jobs AS SOON AS YOUR POSTGRAD BEGINS (if it’s a yearlong course that is)! The October rule will never let you down as most September graduate intakes for the following year are processed the previous autumn.
- Don’t just rely only on graduate positions, apply for junior full time positions in your field, or indirectly related junior positions too as there is not just one way of doing this! If you want to work for yourself, start your business while you’re still at university. It would be ideal if you can have it going for long enough to sustain you once you leave University, you don’t want to be thirty and still living at home, sponging off Mom and Dad. Whatever you do, your aim is not to end up doing something unrelated to what you want to do or even worse, on the dole!
- If you are looking into one of the professions while you are at University, join their accreditation scheme as a junior member, nearly every profession has one of those! Then once you’re not a student anymore, you’ll get a discount for renewal and so won’t have to pay what are quite high prices for membership, especially in your first year of working when you are possibly just paying off your overdraft and parents borrowed money (which by the way is OK too).
- Once you’re in that first job, look at professional exams and put your foot on that accelerator! Once you have your first professional qualification, no one cares about your degree anymore and in the professions, those exams matter A LOT to your salary, especially when you’re in the position of changing jobs diagonally (to a different company, at a higher level). If your company won’t pay for you, reduce your living standards for a while by getting a flatmate and if you already live in a one bedroom, negotiate with your parents or family friends rates for you to move back in with them for that short period of time while your salary isn’t enough to pay for your exams and sustain you at the same time. You could even rent out your flat if you wanted it back after that year, or move out of it cleanly, but you must focus on those exams because as long as you’re not married or have children, you are in a peak position with no distractions to nail as many professional exams as you can before that comes along. If you are married then discuss with your spouse how that fits into your joint vision, I know nothing about that part of life!
- Once you’re in that full time job, work hard and when you’re done working, work more! This is the conveyor belt to promotions, bonuses, responsibilities and influence beyond your wildest dreams. If what you do for a living is not what you want to do, re-position yourself by re-training or moving into another job. If what you do for a living is what you want to do, thank God and help others find their feet because you are in the minority 🙂
They Think It’s All Over…..
I came to this country aged ten as part of a family of economic migrants, French nationals coming to the UK after having been expatriates in Nigeria for decades. My Mom met my Father in France and together they returned to Africa to make a life for them and for a family that was to come. Since arriving here, I went from a very bad school to an excellent school, then moved forward to one of the best further education colleges in the country and then to one of the top five universities in the UK and then to the top University for my postgraduate field in all the UK, all of which I found and pursued alone. I realized then, as I know now that the UK is the land of golden opportunities, but those opportunities are only for those who are prepared to chase them without tiring, ceaselessly, forever! I have learned the art of networking, social climbing and positioning and the results of it can be seen in my life as I am living it now which brings me onto my final and most important point: Have vision, maintain focus, push every door until one opens and keep going against all odds!
‘The Lord is on my side; I will not fear. What can man do to me? The Lord is on my side and takes my part, He is among those who help me; therefore shall I see my desire established upon those who hate me. It is better to trust and take refuge in the Lord than to put confidence in man. It is better to trust and take refuge in the Lord than to put confidence in princes.’ Psalm 118:6-9 (Amp)
Governments will come and go and they will make mistakes, cuts will be made and things are set to get even tougher for everyone who isn’t part of the ‘wealth managed’ elite. But it is not for us to depend on the state for anything as they are given to administrate the resources they have for those who depend on them. And as much as we might technically form part of that, and partake of whatever help they offer, that is not what we rely on for bread. It is on us to wait on Jesus for everything and every decision. Ask those who have much more life experience than you do, who have always been there for you, make sound decisions with firm focus and a tight grip on God’s will for your life. This means that as a primary thing, you must pursue God aggressively, seeking Him first and not letting Him go until He shows you, tells you and paves the way for you to then act accordingly, because although people tell you that you might be disadvantaged from being a particular race, or gender, from living in a particular location, or being in one typed ‘class’ or another, it does not mean you have to stay what they label you.
I climbed up and broke free from the chains of imperial slavery in modern Britain and so can you!
God Bless You In Your Journey!
Stay Fabulous
One Love
Bella.x




