http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/030608WA.shtmlThe lunch table was full of people in the same boat: Single mothers who are trainees in the hydraulics and pipe-fitting trades, thrown together and traveling to a place none of them could quite imagine.
"I don't know how I want to say this," said Lillian McEwan, who is 31 and a mother of four. "But I trust you guys more than people that I've known all my life."
For a moment, silence. Then it seemed everyone spoke at once. Hands reached out to touch. Heads nodded in understanding.
"We've all had our hearts broken," said Shannon Heidelberg, 36, who is raising a 12-year-old and a 2-year-old. "But there's no one here who's going to turn around and hurt you."
Here in a state with the highest gap in the nation between a woman's wage and a man's, and a divorce rate 30 percent above the national average, some women are finding a new way to storm the economic barricades.
They are working with an unusual nonprofit organization, Climb Wyoming, which takes women who have absorbed a few of life's body blows - bad or absent men, drugs, public assistance and jail are all common stories - and combines free job training with psychological counseling.
But Climb Wyoming's real core insight is female solidarity - that the group, trained and forged together more like a platoon than a class, will become an anchor of future success. New skills can go only so far in changing a life, the group's trainers say; sometimes it takes a sisterhood.