Welcome back to CoPFB!
In my last post, I detailed how I found myself with $1 to my name.
Even after years have passed, I still remember that day as if it were yesterday–I remember walking the last walk through the parking garage to my car (feeling ill), I remember mindlessly navigating myself to the nearest ATM (running a red light in the process), and I remember the pit-in-my-stomach feeling when I realized that I wouldn’t be able to pay my rent.
No Money, No Job, No Home
I was already a week behind on the rent (and wouldn’t be living for Boston for another 3 weeks), had no job, and no money. As I walked back to my car, I found myself thinking about the piles of mail I had woefully neglected for quite some time. Then it hit me: credit cards send you those convenience checks where you can just write them out and have the cash you need. Eureka; I could pay my rent!!
I hopped in my car, sped home, and tore through the envelopes. I wildly threw the papers everywhere, searching only for the glorious checks that Citibank had sent me time and time again.
A Hair-Brained Idea
At last, I found a set. I held it up, beaming; proud of myself for figuring out some way to get out of this mess. I ran out of my apartment and headed to the nearest Wells Fargo.
As I stood nervously in line, I ignored all of the feelings and instincts screaming at me that this wasn’t a good idea. But as the next available teller smiled and asked me how he could help, I timidly set the checks–hands trembling–on the counter and squeaked that I’d like to write one out for cash.
His response?
He laughed at me!
Apparently, the type of check I was trying to use as a cash advance was only good for balance transfers. Furthermore, with the amount of credit card debt I was carrying (about $13K at the time), there was no way my available credit could accommodate the cash advance, associated fees, and immediate interest. Essentially, I had nothing but a piece of useless paper in my hands.
Flaming red in the face and eyes brimming with tears, I high-tailed it out of there. I spent the next 20 minutes sitting in my car crying, wondering what to do. Here I was, a bright (4.0 student in college!), educated, motivated woman with no money, no credit, no job, and soon, no place to live.
Admitting Defeat
As I contemplated the very few options left for my situation, I made the hardest financial decision I had made up until this point in my life: I called my landlord and told her that I wouldn’t be able to pay the rent next month.
Then I drove home and began packing my things because while I may not have had any money, I still had my moral compass pointing due-North. In good conscience, there was no way I could stay in a place where I wouldn’t be able to pay the rent.
If I didn’t figure the situation out soon, I would officially become homeless.
This post is part of my Confessions of a PF Blogger series. Other posts include:
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: The Series
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: No Happy Meal for You
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: $0.25 per Quart
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: 16 Candles
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: $5,500 in Cash
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: A Slow Slide into Credit Card Debt Hell
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: $1 to My Name
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: Homeless
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: Powerless
- Confessions of a PF Blogger: A Second Chance
Jen
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Wow. What a story. Glad to hear you are here today in a much better situation. I am glad you didn't cash those cheques. It would have just made the problem worse. Thanks for showing the importance of following your moral compass. It is the only way to live in my mind.
I just wanted to drop by to say that I am really enjoying this series! It's always so inspiring to see how far people can come in a relatively short amount of time.
Now I am going to have to stay up late and get caught up on the series, if I am grouchy in the AM I will tell hubby it is our fault!! Ha, great post, can't wait to dig in to the rest
You have definitely come a long way from those days!
Wow what a story. I'm curious did you leave the same day you told your landlord that you couldn't pay rent or did you wait a few weeks? It would have been hard for me to just up and leave especially with no jo, no money and no place to stay.
What a gripping story! Can't wait to read more. The good news is I'm sure there's a happy ending to the story, right?
Thanks, Miss T! I'm so happy that I didn't cash those checks as well–I may never have had the wake up call I so desperately needed!And yes, one should always uphold morals and values no matter how desperate their situation. I hope that by sharing these tidbits that I can inspire others to change their situations in a positive, healthy way.
Thanks, Katie! The biggest step was realizing how badly I need to make some changes. Those posts are coming soon
Haha…I hope you weren't up too late!!
Indeed I have. But honestly, if I can do it, ANYONE can!!
Thanks for your comment, YFS! I'm happy to see you stopping by I didn't move out that day, but I will share the full run-down in my next post. (Ahh…evil to leave you hanging, yes?)
Thanks, Buck! It's quite the soap opera indeed but I can't hide the fact that all of this has shaped who I am today. The happy ending took a looooong time to get to; perhaps I'm not even all the way there yet!
Wow, that's quite a tough spot to be in! It's great to hear about your personal experiences leading to where you are today. Looking forward to reading more!
Looking forward to part two! I can't imagine how awful that felt. Ugh. Gives me a pit in the stomach for sure. But everyone has to wake up somehow, eh?
Its posts like this that make me read you blog. I might now always comment, but its the honest stories and the real truth that make PF blogs personal, relational, and dead on!
I can't emphasize enough thanks for sharing your story! Five years ago, I was in a similar situation. Over the course of a year, I took out over $3,000 in those credit card checks to pay rent while I worked 80 hours a week as an adjunct college teacher and waitress. Finally in the fall, my debt came to a head. I moved out of my house, found new homes for my cats, and moved in with family. I started paying off my credit cards and successfully paid them all off last year! Yet, my fiance and I now have another 10k in credit card debt – eek.
Thanks, Jeffrey! I've made so many positive changes in my life and financial framework that it's almost as if I'm a different person. I'd prefer to think of it as a shinier, happier version of the same me though
Wake up, indeed! It was a rough time but I honestly wouldn't change it because who knows where I'd be today if I hadn't pulled myself together….
Thank you so much!! I'm happy to see you commenting, but I know what you mean; I have an ebb & flow to my own comments as well!
Wow…kudos to you for making great changes as well! You can certainly kick that $10K to the curb. I'm happy to hear that you're enjoying this series. It's nerve-wracking to reveal so much sometimes, but it's also pretty liberating.
I would have never believed you were in that sort of position knowing how you are now.I've said it time and again but you are amazing.Looking forward to future post in this series.
Thanks, Rafiki! My story is nothing more than proof that if you really want to make a change and are willing to work hard to do so, anything is possible
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