Victor Markhoff / Ana Victoria Markhoff / vvictorman_uel - Powerchair faker pooner, has every illness, allergic to Krebs cycle, bed mayo enjoyer, kicked out of house and mental hospital, constant ebeggar, applesauce heiress paid to yeet her teets

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I think there is a decent chance she is trolling us with the lost jar of spicy mayo in bed post. It's just too perfect. But I am probably giving her too much credit.

Vicky may even be thinking that if she makes more of a mess, this time Adult Protective Services will finally give her the 24/7 servants she deserves. And as a bonus, she might be able to get an infection from sleeping in spoiled mayonaise. A mild case of folliculitis would surely require a month in the hospital, right?
 
Her parents have tried so hard to get Vicki into some kind of life where she can at least be happy and function. She was so mad they sent her to Florida, but it was clear they wanted to provide her some kind of rest cure by the sea where she could get outside and feel the sun on her face.

For these kinds of parents, similar to Dave Muscato's parents, I'm sure it's very hard to know what to do. Vicki and Dave's type of insanity has been combined with a shocking willingness to publicly flail and make ruinous accusations against parents any time they don't comply.

The Markhoffs keep thinking that if they just provide some environment where Vicki feels like getting around and having a good time, she'll snap herself out of this nightmare existence. But she's obviously way too far gone and that will never work.

The Muscatos must have had a hell of a time finally deciding to withdraw support from their leech, too, not just because "oh we wuvss him" (I think both Dave and Vicki wore that out a long time ago) but because Dave's narc rage extends to defamatory statements and harassing lawsuits, causing untold embarrassment in their social circles.

Vicki, like Dave, uses her parents' position and desire to live quiet, pleasantly social upper-middle class lives against them. "You won't give me what I want? Then I'll beg from my classmates' parents, who'll tell all the other parents you're either unsupportive or a cheap bastard."

They no longer have an option for a non-embarrassing life. Back in the day, you'd Rosemary Kennedy a kid like this just to save your own reputation. Honestly, maybe their best bet would have been paying for every trans affirming procedure imaginable, and hope she ends up like that pooner Griffin or Gruffin or whatever, dead of surgery complications at a young age. You make a nice obituary that focuses mostly on her life before the insanity, mourn what could have been, and cut your losses.
 
The books that she left at her parents' house before going to Florida, before moving back to New York City, the books she needs to declare her major that she only decided on in September, when she was trying to sign up for classes at NYU. Not books for a particular class or classes, but ones specifically to declare her major.
Those books.
:story:
Does Victoria not know about Reserve Copies?
Every college course I ever took would ensure the library had at least one copy of the textbook(s) on reserve so that students who hadn't received it yet / couldn't afford it could just go down to the library and review their copy and make photocopies.

Which means eventually she will roll over and crush it, smearing old warm mayonnaise all over her bed and body, because that’s preferable to her than to keep looking until she’s found it. Or, if you have to eat in bed, don’t put the dipping sauces on the mattress with you. I would think someone bed bound sometimes who just has to eat DoorDash in bed to recover would have routines to keep the bed as clean as possible, especially if they are disabled and alone and know they will have no help cleaning up in the event they misplace the mayonnaise and spill it in the sheets
Seems like someone this "disabled" would get one of those hospital style tables that slides the table right over the bed.
 
For these kinds of parents, similar to Dave Muscato's parents, I'm sure it's very hard to know what to do.
As much as my girlish fantasies tend to cow matchmaking (Cianfriglia/Gagliardi OTP), it'd be so interesting to get the "supportive" lolcow families together to discuss their shared struggle.

It'd make a good TLC show if you threw in a TV psychologist and an estate planner.
I really want to know what specific books one needs to have on hand not for writing a paper or taking a class but "declaring a major."
Man, you know she's laughing at us for making it apparent we didn't go to fancy college like she does, and thus don't know about the ritual where you trek with your bound-like-magically-bound-to-you Norton Anthology through the catacombs beneath the school, slaying goblins and disarming traps, until at the end you can dip your student ID into the sacred pool and ever after it will glow slightly when someone does a microaggression in a three hex radius.
 
She's using "declaring her major" as a shorthand for what they actually do at Gallatin, which is called the IAPC (Intellectual Autobiography and Plan for Concentration).

The IAPC is a navel-gazing essay about what you're going to do, consisting of these parts:

By the end of the sophomore year, all students are required to write a two- to three-page essay in which they reflect on their educational experiences and articulate their academic concentrations. This essay, called the Intellectual Autobiography and Plan for Concentration, asks students to describe the central idea(s) of their concentration and the relevant coursework. This essay is a way for students to reflect on how they learn as individuals and to develop an academic plan with long-term goals in mind.

In writing the essay, students may want to begin by reflecting on their educational journey and exploring some of the following questions:
  • Why did you choose Gallatin? What were your educational goals? Have those goals changed? Why and how?
  • What educational experiences and courses (internships, seminars, independent studies, workshops, private lessons) have been influential to you? What was particularly interesting and why? What ideas have evolved from your educational experience so far?
Using these questions as a starting point, students can then turn their attention to the plan for their concentration:
  • What idea, period, subject, theme, concept, discipline is of particular interest to you? Is there a central idea or theme around which your concentration may be organized?
  • What kinds of study will you pursue? What types of courses (internships, seminars, independent studies, workshops, private lessons) will you take to construct the concentration and in what sequence might these classes be taken?
  • What is the meaning of such a course of study? What connections does this course of study have to other work and educational experiences, and what is its relevance to your future plans for graduate study or career?
As you are writing your IAPC statement you also should be thinking about the following:
  • Gallatin asks all students to engage in interdisciplinary thinking. How might your concentration’s topic, themes or questions be viewed through the lens of an interdisciplinary inquiry?
  • Gallatin expects students to analyze their concentration’s themes or questionsin a historical framework. Is there a specific history of the concept(s), issue(s), problem(s), or theme(s) that your concentration will be exploring? How have your objects or topics of studydeveloped over time? Have you taken courses that help you to think historically already? If not, what courses might you take in the future?
  • Gallatin requires students to situate the key themes or questions that the concentration examines within different cultural, geographic or political contexts. How might your central themes and questions be understood in different political and cultural contexts? What courses might you take to help you to think across these different contexts?
For most students, many of these questions are similar to those they answer when they complete the Gallatin Plan of Study form. The Intellectual Autobiography and Plan for Concentration becomes the opportunity to integrate these ideas and to help students to seek out the ways that their courses converge and coalesce into a unique, individualized course of study.

Since Vicki is a cow who, like my other perpetual favorite Becky Gerber, often has a kernel of truth in the lies, I assume she wants these books so she can cite specific sources for her ideas about disability activism.
 
Victoria now says she actually doesn't have the money for her new place, just a day after saying she already had put down the deposit and first month's rent. Now she needs $1000 to avoid homelessness.

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She needs to be close to the best hospitals. No one else can treat her.
It's only the 2nd, Goddamn. I guess her trust fund deposit is late due to the holidays.

Most grifters try to keep their lies consistent, you only catch the inconsistencies if you follow them awhile. Vicky, on the other hand, only needs a day or so to forget her own story.
 
I had read back a year in the thread recently and it’s obvious, for all her BS, her parents are still very much in her life and taking care of everything.
She's like Jake Alley that way. You don't need a smoking gun. The gap between her evident income and her standard of living is so obviously Grand Canyon vast that there's no other possible explanation.

That nobody has ever meaningfully called her on it just shows you how the whole twitter "mutual aid" phenomenon is ripoff artists all the way down.
 
She's like Jake Alley that way. You don't need a smoking gun. The gap between her evident income and her standard of living is so obviously Grand Canyon vast that there's no other possible explanation.

That nobody has ever meaningfully called her on it just shows you how the whole twitter "mutual aid" phenomenon is ripoff artists all the way down.
I have no doubt many “mutual aid” con artists live in hovels and are begging for money because they want door dash or fentanyl or didn’t bother to didn’t pay their utilities.

Vicky is another level of a spoiled rich kid doing it for the cheap thrill of “begging” like a poor! “Look at poor me! I’m poor and begging, tee-hee”. I compare it to the rich bitches who like to shoplift. They can easily pull out Dad’s CC to buy what they want but enjoy the illicit thrill of stealing it. I think Vicky’s e-begging is in that vein, and it also humiliates her parents so bonus.

I have little doubt mom and dad had to go down to Urban Outfitters (or whatever store) to pick up little Vicky for five finger discounts at some point between ages 12-16. There should be a Venn digram of eating disorders and shoplifting and munchiedom.
 
Doesn't NYU have loads of resources for things like homeless students? I feel like they'd be tripping all over themselves over this kind of thing.
I remember seeing reference to this earlier in the thread, but can't find it in search. Victoria failed a bunch of classes and stopped meeting SAP for financial aid several years ago and refused to move out of her dorm and dragged NYU through the mud for making her homeless because she was trying to stay in the dorm despite not being a student anymore. See https://archive.ph/CfPjH and https://archive.ph/rVVxi for a couple of related news articles.

Homeless LGBTQ college students in NYC major in survival​

Victor Manuel Markhoff, 20, is a student at New York University who pursues his education while being homeless after coming out as transgender to his family. Photo Credit: The Meatpackers American Brasserie
As he anxiously sat alone with a worn backpack in the library while groups of coffee-fueled students whispered about their weekend plans, Victor Manuel Markhoff kept his eyes lowered to his high-top Converse, focusing on the only subject he can afford to meticulously study — survival.

“I don’t have money and there’s no way I can keep up with rent. I am basically screwed,” said Markhoff, 20, a transgender man and junior at New York University. “I’m perpetually stuck in the dorms. I have no other home.”
Markhoff struggles daily to push his PTSD off his chest and get out of bed. His academics, which should be a priority, dull in comparison to the aftermath of his parents physically, mentally and emotionally abusing him for being transgender, he said. He cannot concentrate on anything beyond finding SNAP-approved foods that don’t stress his celiac disease and searching for a job that accommodates a debilitating genetic disorder that leaves his body susceptible to joint dislocations and tissue tears.
Nearly two months into the spring semester, Markhoff has yet to attend a class. He can’t keep up with his grade-point average. He can’t figure out a major. He can’t even complete class registration until he secures a financial aid package that provides housing. Despite his struggle, he said he is better off than other homeless transgender students at the university, many of whom are forced to reside in shelters or live couch-to-couch.
“It’s a very silent homelessness,” he said. “There are people who have had to leave NYU after coming out and getting cut off [from their families] who were not able to get scholarships.”
Kate Barnhart, director of the LGBTQ nonprofit organization New Alternatives, said it is often harder for LGBTQ youth, especially those who are homeless, to succeed in education.

“The shelters are loud and it’s hard to study. … They’ll have a place to keep their stuff but how safe it is varies. People have textbooks and school supplies stolen,” Barnhart said. “One of my clients spends just as much time as she can at her school, but folks will also go to the library or wherever they can find a spot.”
Many homeless LGBTQ students are kicked out of their homes for their sexual and gender identity, forcing them to survive financially and academically without family support, she said. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration found that LGBTQ youth can end up on the street as young as 13 years old.
Although there is no study specifically on the number of homeless LGBTQ students, the most recent study conducted by the city shows there are more than 2,000 unaccompanied homeless individuals under 24 years old and The Ali Forney Center found that 1,600 of those youth are LGBTQ.

“New York is kind of a mecca for LGBTQ homeless youth, so what happens is folks come from all over the country to New York looking for the place they think they’ll be safe and accepted,” Barnhart said. “The trouble is, they don’t know how difficult it’s going to be so they get here and they find themselves in trouble.”
Being homeless from such a young age makes it difficult for many people to afford expenses outside of what is needed to survive, including education, Barnhart continued.
NYU recommends students budget nearly $5,000 a semester for books and supplies, transportation and other personal expenses, but for Markhoff, this budget is essentially nonexistent. He lives semester-to-semester on a small refund he receives from the school, which barely covers food and other basic necessities.

"I’m figuring out what exactly to do. I’m applying for cash assistance," he said. "Honestly, a lot of it has been me denying myself my most basic needs. It’s been brutal and I don’t know how I’ve been able to do it."
The financial difficulty, as well as the mental and emotional stress of living an atypical college experience, is burdensome to all homeless students. Students who also are LGBTQ bear an even more complicated challenge. Advocates and researchers from the National Center for Biotechnology Information found LGBTQ youth deal with stressors other homeless individuals may not, including discrimination from their loved ones, not having proper access to resources and the process of identifying with their sexuality and gender.
Markhoff sought to reduce those stressors by raising money through GoFundMe for top surgery, which he underwent in January. Choosing to raise funds for breast removal rather than for a permanent home or school expenses was really no choice at all, he said. For him, the surgery was medically necessary.
“I can’t describe the sheer anguish of dealing with that part of my body,” he said. “It’s like making the choice between heart surgery and school. … I look in the mirror now, which didn’t used to happen.”
With a new sense of self-confidence, Markhoff said dealing with the anxiety and stress of being a homeless LGBTQ student is improving every day, but he still has a long journey ahead. He is focusing on getting permanent housing, furthering his education and encouraging others in a similar situation.
“I wish that every time people found out I’m homeless, that instead of seeing tragedy, they would see this hope,” he said. “I see it as a triumph to have come as far as I have and to have respected myself and loved myself so much to recognize a situation where being homeless is better than being where I was.”
Markhoff’s mother denied his claims, stating that she and her husband have attempted to contact and reconcile with their son.

Victor Markhoff was born in Belgium, raised in Pennsylvania, and is now facing homelessness in New York City when he loses his on-campus housing on Wednesday. The 20-year-old transgender student was told by NYU that he has to leave his dorm in Broome on May 15, and has set up a GoFundMe page to avoid ending up on the street.
He said the predicament came about after he started struggling academically, resulting in the loss of his financial aid, which meant he could not afford school and thus was not eligible for student housing. An NYU psychiatrist then deemed him “noncompliant” and refused to sign off on a medical appeal that would have extended his scholarship after he missed an appointment due to chronic pain, he told NYU Local.
“Because I couldn’t get financial aid, I couldn’t afford school, and therefore housing, anymore,” he explained. “I rely on school for housing, and you need to be a student in order to be in housing.”
Markhoff says that while NYU has offered some assistance in the past, including services through the Wellness Center, he is still trapped by housing and food insecurity. The Gallatin junior, who has been homeless since coming out at 18, remains in housing limbo because his Satisfactory Academic Progress (SAP) has suffered as a result of the strains of his situation, which in turn threatens his scholarship.
“I’ve been working really, really, really, really hard,” he said. “It’s been like a full-time job plus overtime trying to secure myself housing.”
It is estimated that some 70,000 transgender youth in the United States do not have secure housing. Markhoff, who also struggles with PTSD and a number of physical disabilities, is one of the 11.6% of transgender and gender non-binary NYU students who have reported experiencing barriers in university housing, according to the Being@NYU survey. He says his situation is not a unique one at NYU, and that the countless academic and financial obstacles he’s faced at the school are indicative of a wider problem.
“I’m shocked though, because it doesn’t seem like NYU has a procedure for what to do when a student does not have other housing or ends up in a situation like needing to take leave,” he told Local. “I know there are other students who have been in my shoes and I just feel like there should be a better way of handling this. I can’t be the only student that they’ve encountered who’s been through this, you know?”
A spokesperson for the university did not respond to a request for comment.
As Senator-at-Large for Trans Students, Latine Students, and LGBTQ Students, Markhoff has seen firsthand how the university has been dealing with the very real problems of housing and food insecurity experienced by some students. In his own case, he said that when he told NYU about his unstable housing status their suggestions included going to a shelter.
“I tried to work out something with NYU and I emphasized that I would be homeless,” he said. “If I lose my housing I am completely, 100% homeless, and I think there was genuinely a misunderstanding about what resources exist and a misunderstanding on how living in a shelter is still homelessness.”
Indeed, for many trans youths “shelter is a misnomer,” as they can easily lose their spots, beyond the fact that 70% of them report being harassed or assaulted in shelters. It’s also not a viable option for Markhoff for other reasons, including a severe food allergy that makes sharing a kitchen nearly impossible. His trauma specialist has further warned that moving into a shelter situation would precipitate a “mental health spiral” for him.
He said that even though he found a “good therapist” at the Wellness Center, they were overbooked and only able to meet once every three weeks. “As someone who’s severely traumatized, even once a week is barely enough, so once every three weeks is nowhere near enough to manage my symptoms,” he said.
Now, faced with an uncertain housing and academic future, Markhoff is planning on couch-surfing.
“I already have a couple of couches set up,” he said. “I’m basically setting it up so that I know at least one couch ahead.” His lawyer told him he will likely be homeless for at least a year, or six months at best.
“I want to seriously sit down and pursue my degree and do what I want to do and learn what I want to learn, you know? Because I haven’t been able to do that, I’ve just been going to class like, ‘Alright, I gotta do this so I don’t get homeless,’” he said. “I don’t want to have to do it like that anymore, I want to be in school because I want to be in school, not because it’s school or this giant abyss of homelessness.”

I don't think anybody at NYU has any sympathy for someone who's repeatedly failed most of her classes and not given any actual evidence of serious health issues and they just want her gone ASAP so she'll stop embarrassing them.
 
I remember seeing reference to this earlier in the thread, but can't find it in search. Victoria failed a bunch of classes and stopped meeting SAP for financial aid several years ago and refused to move out of her dorm and dragged NYU through the mud for making her homeless because she was trying to stay in the dorm despite not being a student anymore. See https://archive.ph/CfPjH and https://archive.ph/rVVxi for a couple of related news articles.
Five, going on six years ago now, she was a junior and "homeless." Absolutely astonishing it has been permitted to drag on this long.
 
Five, going on six years ago now, she was a junior and "homeless." Absolutely astonishing it has been permitted to drag on this long.
My suspicion is that she got a formal medical leave of absence at some point and readmitted herself after some timer on SAP/other aid lapsed. This system is supposed to be for, say, a student who develops bipolar disorder or some kind of addiction sophomore year, flunks out, and comes back 3 years later after getting proper treatment and sorting their life out, but Vicky's personality flaws are not so easily fixed.
 
Dad is getting the gun and gasoline, ready to end this shit.
Dad will be JosephStalin posting by the end if the month.

Janet, please warm up the helicopter, you're flying left seat. Kira, please fly right seat. Will and Ken, please assist Mike, the crew chief, after the rest of us have completed the special processing.
 
I have little doubt mom and dad had to go down to Urban Outfitters (or whatever store) to pick up little Vicky for five finger discounts at some point between ages 12-16. There should be a Venn digram of eating disorders and shoplifting and munchiedom.

I don't think Vicky would have had the guts to shoplift. She would have desperately wanted too, but ultimately been too afraid. Instead she'd buy the item and then lie to everyone online that she shoplifted it for antiestablishment points.
 
And that you can’t get at a library or order new copies of. A textbook is about the same as a DoorDash order.

A cheap no-frills printer is maybe 3 or 4 DoorDash orders as well (maybe less, haven't looked around recently) and yet she apparently "desperate needs a printer" lol.

To Vicky, the "poor and close to homelessness" LARP consists entirely of complaining about being poor and marginalized, and having others pity you. I don't think she has any conception of poverty leading to a person having to, you know, change their behavior.

It just does not compute that someone might make the decision to survive on cheap energy bars or ramen because that way they will have money for a printer or a textbook. Vicky doesn't even attempt to fake that behavior, because she isn't aware it exists. "No money" to her simply means "preening online about having no money while continuing to order DoorDash and waiting for the next parental cash infusion."
 
I'm hurt that Vicky called us haters. I don't hate her, I think she's hilarious.
We nominated her for a prestigious Julay which shows how great we think she is.
Everyone please consider vooting, there's some tough competition this year.

@Smellee Cat I'm glad you're here discovering the gloriousness that is Vicky. Chelton thread OGs assemble!
Of course no-one will ever replace Chelton. We will never see the likes of her gurning "stiff attacks" again, but we will always have her videos to laugh at.
 
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