Poets logo

Hold The Cinnamon

The Joys of Poverty

By Tammy CastlemanPublished 2 years ago 1 min read
Top Story - March 2024

I grew up poor, but I didn’t know it,

lived in a shack and later a trailer,

Mama was tired but she didn’t show it,

living on tips that paid for our dinner.

Summertime sunshine, trailer park yard

Empty dishsoap bottle water-squirting joy,

Nothing about it made life seem hard,

Plenty of friends and their own makeshift toys.

Winter icy cold, whistling through walls,

wrapped up in grandmas tattered quilts.

Tea kettle steaming, I can hear it down the hall,

Here comes the toaster, and the tea with milk!

The cupboards near bare but bread heels aplenty,

farm fresh butter in a shiny yellow mound,

toast popping up so high, Mama thinks it’s funny,

slathering that butter on, then sugar oh so shiny.

Sinking my little teeth in to crunchy warm sustenance,

what a delightful treat this is, we must be rich!

Other kids eat plain oatmeal, what a penance!

Sweet tea, sweet milk, sweet toast, I’m the luckiest kid!

Cinnamon. Something grandma puts in apple pie.

A thing too expensive to waste on just anything.

My matriarchs guarded it until the days they died.

Old bread, fresh butter, plain sugar; a joyful thing.

Family

About the Creator

Tammy Castleman

I have been an avid writer and photographer for most of my life. In terms of true passions, those are mine. What I lack for in memory, I make up for in recorded detail. We are what we leave behind.

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insight

  1. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

Add your insights

Comments (22)

Sign in to comment
  • Catsidhe2 years ago

    Touching. Congrats on Top Story!

  • Tammy, this is lovely!

  • Kelsey Clarey2 years ago

    This is very sweet and very nostalgic!

  • You really grasped the best of family regardless of circumstance; congratulations on Top Story!

  • Bamimeke Moses2 years ago

    More knowledge and understanding to do more

  • Simple and sweet words, thankyou for sharing xx

  • Susan Fourtané 2 years ago

    Congratulations on the Top Story! :D

  • Anna 2 years ago

    Congrats on Top Story!🥳🥳🥳

  • Patrick Etyang2 years ago

    woooow you nailed it

  • zulfi bux2 years ago

    Amazing read ..truely enjoyed it..wishing U well and continue writing more amazing stories

  • Susan Fourtané 2 years ago

    A lovely and sweet piece.

  • Spencer Goldade2 years ago

    This is lovely. I had no idea the food we were often eating as kids was considered impoverished. Outlook and context do a lot.

  • Hummingbird2 years ago

    Very enjoyable read! Even your attitude now is displayed as appreciative and without animosity. You must be blessed😍

  • I really love how perfectly simple things can shine so bright in your very lovely piece 👏💕🥰

  • " ld bread, fresh butter, plain sugar; a joyful thing." Those were the simple days, when we could see bounty in the smallest things. I also remember bread with sugar as the ultimate treat, my cousin could always get such, and we would eat it on the low roof, in the shade of the old cherry tree. Thanks for bringing back this memory!

  • Leslie Writes2 years ago

    This is so warm and heartfelt. 💖

  • Gabriel Huizenga2 years ago

    Thank you for sharing this celebration of your childhood blessings! Beautiful to see the joy as more powerful than the poverty.

  • Judey Kalchik 2 years ago

    Great memories. The matriarchs made do with what they had, and made it special.

  • Manisha Dhalani2 years ago

    Brilliantly written and such a reflective piece.

  • Andrea Corwin 2 years ago

    Yum! I always loved the little piece of pie crust baked with cinnamon and sugar. Your story expresses the simplicity of life and its goodness without expensive things and loved even more because it came from the heart.

  • Shirley Belk2 years ago

    Warms my heart.

Find us on social media

Miscellaneous links

  • Explore
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Support

© 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.