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magical thyme

(14,881 posts)
Wed Dec 14, 2011, 08:46 PM Dec 2011

The Shift -- in my financial being?

Quick backgrounder: I've lived pretty close to the bone since my 20s, saved 50%+ of every raise, lived below my means in the 90s, in a 3 room cheap condo when I could afford a house. I always paid my bills off every month. Early in the credit card days, I occasionally split an extra large bill, such as car repair, over 2 months. But when I saw the amount of interest tacked on, I returned to biting the bullet and paying them off immediately. Risk averse, etc.

In the 90s when my career took off, I paid my mortgage off fast -- within 10 years -- and although I looked and looked at houses and farms, prices were rising so fast I just couldn't get myself to move...really, to take on debt. So I just saved and saved for a bigger and bigger down payment. Then came the hi-tech crash followed my 9/11, and my career in the aftermath. And I realized there were places I could I could by cash, and still have left over to start over.

Since then, I've been defrauded and robbed repeatedly, and lost savings to unemployment until nearly broke. First my property, with half the land I paid for. My property trashed with bulldozer 3 weeks after I moved in. My identity -- complete with SSN and more -- stolen by a former colleague.

And then I took a big risk and took on student loans to go to school for a new career. I did my homework: federal government projected 14% growth/year, government statistics of median wages, called local hospital to get salary ranges. It all worked out so I should have been able to squeak by working 3 days/week and be comfortable working 4. I planned to either 1. sell my house to pay off the loans with enough left over to start over, or 2. pay off the loans in the standard 10 years and be free of them.

And then last spring when I got the job offer -- part time, per diem 1-2 days/week. And the starting salary was 25% lower than I'd been led to understand. This last is critical. I have felt lied to and cheated once again. And I've been in a panic as to how to get by ever since. I have cut expenses to the bone: heating the house to only 53, growing my own veggies and fruit, buying in bulk only when food is on sale, no extras at all for me. And despite my best efforts over 3 years, I've been unable to sell. Nobody can get a mortgage.

The bottom line was there was no way I was going to be able to continue like this. Management tried to bully me a few weeks ago into working full time nights. It was really, really ugly. But my health is the one thing they haven't destroyed and this would destroy it, so I refused. There was no way I could make it through the next 10 months, let alone 10 years. And I'm tired, people. Dead freakin' bone tired. School was supposed to help me start over. Instead, it broke my life and spirit into pieces.

Then I hit bottom and let go. Seriously, I was ready to rent a van, drive the animals to Best Friends and check out. Done. Finis. Stick a fork in her!

My identity is gone. Who am I anyway? A credit rating? Prey for sharks? A debt slave? A slave to the fear of debt? Better I use up my hard-earned 800+ credit rating than some identity stealing thug.

I was contacted by a real estate investment shark that offers seriously lowball cash for your house. I decided the house and my life are already gone, so I responded to their emails with the intent of dumping the house. The sharks vanished. I couldn't even unload my house at a rock bottom total loss!

And then, on another board, someone reached out and advised me that the new Income Based Repayment for student loans slashes the payments to as low as zero. My understanding was that they couldn't charge more than 15% of your gross or net...but I never saw anything that indicated they'd be lower than that!!!!!! Much, much lower.

In one afternoon I shifted from someone who intended to be debt-free for life to someone who expects to die with large unpaid debts. I. Don't. Care. I did my part, and then some. The system failed me over and over. The system owes me.

In one phone call, my student loans were deferred for 2 months and the forms for IBR sent to me. After 25 years of very low income and very low payments -- a fraction of the original amount -- the balance will be forgiven. I'll owe income taxes on the forgiven portion. Assuming I live to 83, lol!

In a couple months, I may qualify for Liheap fuel assistance, and from there for free insulation and energy retrofits. If not, I'll call Joe4Oil.

The income I'm not spending on student loans will hopefully be saved to replace my car when the time comes, or even to add a wood/pellet stove if I can.

After the phone call I turned the thermostat up to 58 degrees, bought 2 packages of brownies, a small bag of chips, a chocolate bar and a new purse. Small extravagances denied for too long.

5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The Shift -- in my financial being? (Original Post) magical thyme Dec 2011 OP
I'm pleased you didn't let management bully you BanzaiBonnie Dec 2011 #1
it is when you're body has adjusted to it magical thyme Dec 2011 #2
Wow - what an incredible story Remember Me Dec 2011 #3
Congrats on the student loans teenagebambam Dec 2011 #4
I've already looked into it magical thyme Dec 2011 #5

BanzaiBonnie

(3,621 posts)
1. I'm pleased you didn't let management bully you
Wed Dec 14, 2011, 10:22 PM
Dec 2011

and you put your health first.

When can you get help with the heat? Soon I hope, soon. I hope you're warm enough. 58 degrees is NOT warm.

 

magical thyme

(14,881 posts)
2. it is when you're body has adjusted to it
Thu Dec 15, 2011, 12:18 PM
Dec 2011

in fact, it was too warm and I ended up turning it down to 56!

Management bully tried to meet with me privately re: nights again 2 days ago. I was in panic mode and reached out to a tech, who went to a lead tech who has been through the wringer herself. Word came back: don't ever, ever, ever meet with manager alone again. Bring supervisor.

So I invited the supervisor on the pretext that the meeting was about scheduling and since she makes up the schedule, she should be there too. Manager looked very startled to see supervisor walk in behind me But it gave me the protection from bullying that I needed, along with some advise to help me survive the couple of nights I am doing til the new night tech comes on.

 

Remember Me

(1,532 posts)
3. Wow - what an incredible story
Thu Dec 15, 2011, 08:48 PM
Dec 2011

I'm so sorry for all your problems.

I am looking forward to the crash that takes the money away from those who've had it always (e.g., Rothschilds and other 1%-ers), and sets the stage for an economical/financial system that is fair and just and built on trust and integrity. (This is what Matthew has predicted -- for those who follow those channeled monthly missives.)

teenagebambam

(1,592 posts)
4. Congrats on the student loans
Mon Dec 19, 2011, 10:29 AM
Dec 2011

that program has also saved my financial life. Also look into the "Public Service" option - if you are employed in any kind of education, non-profit, or (I believe) health profession, that forgiveness happens after ten years, not 25. There's no way to apply for it yet (no one is eligible for forgiveness til 2017 so they haven't created a form yet!) but I'm also banking on that.

 

magical thyme

(14,881 posts)
5. I've already looked into it
Mon Dec 19, 2011, 11:48 AM
Dec 2011

The 'public service' option requires full-time employment for the entire 10 years. I'm per diem right now and don't expect to get full-time at all, due to the downsizing. Plus due to the toxic work environment and my declining energy levels, I may even move my retirement from 70 to 62.

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