Balling On A Budget

Walmart Runway: The Grad School Edition

Listen, I’m a grad student, not a hedge fund manager. My budget is tighter than the security on Beyoncé’s tour bus, and I’ve got textbooks that cost more than a monthly MetroCard. So when it comes to clothes, I don’t need a designer name sewn into my shirt—I just need a clean fit, a good vibe, and enough cash left over for coffee and existential dread.

That’s why I hit up Walmart, the true unsung hero of the fashion world. I walk in like it’s Fashion Week in Paris, except it’s Harlem on a Wednesday, and I’ve only got 60 bucks and a cart full of ambition.

Now some folks think you need to drop $200 on clothing to look sharp. Me? My jeans? $16.47. My shirt? $5.99. And guess what? Every time I step out, someone hits me with, “I see you! Where’d you get that?” I just smile and say, “Imported… from aisle 14.”

These brands out here trying to sell “distressed” jeans for $210—like…sir, I’m distressed enough. My jeans don’t come with holes unless I make them climbing five flights of stairs to get to seminar.

What really gets me is when folks try to act like fashion equals money. Nah. Style is when you can pull a ‘fit together from a bin labeled “Final Clearance” and still look like you’re headed to brunch with Obama.

So yeah, no designers over here. Just a grad student with bills to pay, lectures to attend, and a commitment to looking fly for under $60. Because financial responsibility is the real flex.

Dee

About Author

I’m Delante, grad student, cultural narrator, strategist, and survivor of the unspoken syllabus. My blog From the Block to the Books is more than storytelling. It’s a reckoning. A bridge between what I had to do, what I chose to chase, and what I’m building now. Everything I write is steeped in truth. I document the hustle not for applause, but so others know they aren’t alone. That ambition can coexist with past mistakes. That strategy can come from struggle. And that resilience looks good when it’s custom-fitted with intellect, culture, and control. And then there’s hip-hop—the culture, the community, the chronicles. I don’t just listen. I decode it. I live by its ethos. All things posted on this website are things that made me who I am today.