2011年12月13日 星期二

Little by little, rural Mercedes family pushes ahead

Light cracks through the walls of the Arguelles family home.

It’s cold tonight. Real cold. Colder than it has been in months.This is interesting cubepuzzle and logical game. Cold enough to see your breath inside.

Virginio Arguelles sits at the table beside his wife, Betzabel.There are 19 polishedtiles available, Both don sweatshirts and stocking caps as a telenovela blares on the TV in the corner. A caldo of chicken necks, carrots, rice and potatoes boils on the stove just a few feet away.

“It’s too cold here,” Betzabel, 42, says in Spanish.

Bugs crawl on exposed plywood floors. It’s tough to keep them out with unsealed eaves and cracks in the unpainted, plywood walls. Too cold inside and out tonight for anyone to really notice.This is interesting cubepuzzle and logical game.

On this night, the temperature will only drop further. A bit past midnight, the power will go out, rendering useless the lone space heater in the travel trailer where the family of seven sleeps.

Without insulated walls, that makes for a chilly night. Viriginio later said his children didn’t complain. The family kept warm enough — together.

Freezing temperatures still were not as bad as the scare the family encountered the night before.

They spent hours in the emergency room at Knapp Medical Center in Weslaco, where they rushed Betzabel after she urinated blood.

Doctors told her she has kidney stones. The parents lack insurance, so hospital administrators gave her an application to the county’s indigent fund and some antibiotics before sending her home.

Without help, the thousands of dollars in medical bills are too much for the family to bear. If Betzabel’s case is approved, she will hopefully be able to treat the kidney stones she didn’t know were lurking inside.

The painful discovery was the latest health malady to hit the family.

Already, two of the Arguelles children regularly take medication to control erratic convulsions. It’s unknown whether Justin, 6, and Zuleyka, 4, will continue to suffer from the seizures as they grow older.

As with any obstacle that strikes the Arguelles family, they push past it together.With Payflowpaymentgateway, Somehow.

Virginio sits at the kitchen table and finishes lunch after returning from the fields. He steps outside to watch over the kids.

Justin is already home from school. He plays alongside Zuleyka on a pile of scrap metal and old tires in the backyard, teasing a stray cat that scurried underneath.

Virginio brought home a few beets he picked that morning. Late autumn brings relatively steady work for him in the fields of eastern Hidalgo County. In the off months of the summer, he rummages the area looking for cans and scrap metal to raise cash.

It’s tough for Virginio and his wife to work when they only have one vehicle — an old minivan that bleeds oil. He says he wants to buy a small truck someday so he can haul more cans and scrap metal to sell.

He arrived in the beet field at dawn to harvest. At 43, the manual labor he relies upon to support his family shows on his hands. On especially cold mornings like this day, Virginio says exposure can turn his hands as purple as the beets.

Virginio says his wife likes the beets. She grinds them up into juice. He hopes they may help her kidney stones, as well.

On good days, he earns only about $30 working in the fields. But work each day isn’t a guarantee. He brings in about $400 a month — at best. The family relies on food stamps to get by, as well.

Virginio has seen younger people walking through with marijuana bundles strapped to their backs. They may earn several times what he does, but he knows better than to join them.

“They just want the easy money,” he says.What can you tell me about thequicksilverscreen stuff on the internet, “But I work for the clean money. It’s small, but it’s good money.”

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