Hi,
We have a situation not unlike many other people, I'm sure. By the time we pay our mortgage, credit cards, and normal recurrent household bills, i.e., utilities, we have very little money left over for gas, groceries, clothing, etc. I work in a job where I do get something like commission checks in addition to salary, and usually I have full intention on using that money to pay down the credit cards more than the minimum payment. But that is not happening at all. We just seem to be going further and further into debt. I end up using the commission checks so we don't have to go further in debt that particular month. We have substantial credit card debt now, and I just don't see any other way than bankruptcy! Our appt. is next Thursday.
My question is, I keep seeing that we shouldn't charge for about 90 days. But we can't get to the point of not charging. And this summer has been worse than ever. On the one card we use (the others we simply pay on), we have accumulated nearly $5,000 new debt over the last three months. We pay the minimum, sometimes a bit more, but we charge way more than we pay.
I guess I'm asking your advice. Should we not pay on any of the cards so we can use the money we would have paid to live on for the next 90 days and thus not charge? Or is it better to show the trustee or whoever that at least we kept trying to make the payments. We have never missed a single payment, and at this point our credit rating is excellent. But I realize now that's just because we keep charging to live, and we are able to make the payments on time. I just don't don't know when to stop the insanity. Truthfully, we could live like this for another year, but our debt would rise ridiculously.
Anyway, I guess my question is what to do about the next 90 days? There are a couple things we charged in the last 90 days we could return, i.e., some window blinds ($300). Would that show a good faith effort? Or is it just a pittance anyway? We could borrow some money, too, from family to pay off what we charged in the last 90 days. Should we do that?
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated. We are seeing an attorney next week, but this stuff is weighing on my mind!
Rick
We have a situation not unlike many other people, I'm sure. By the time we pay our mortgage, credit cards, and normal recurrent household bills, i.e., utilities, we have very little money left over for gas, groceries, clothing, etc. I work in a job where I do get something like commission checks in addition to salary, and usually I have full intention on using that money to pay down the credit cards more than the minimum payment. But that is not happening at all. We just seem to be going further and further into debt. I end up using the commission checks so we don't have to go further in debt that particular month. We have substantial credit card debt now, and I just don't see any other way than bankruptcy! Our appt. is next Thursday.
My question is, I keep seeing that we shouldn't charge for about 90 days. But we can't get to the point of not charging. And this summer has been worse than ever. On the one card we use (the others we simply pay on), we have accumulated nearly $5,000 new debt over the last three months. We pay the minimum, sometimes a bit more, but we charge way more than we pay.
I guess I'm asking your advice. Should we not pay on any of the cards so we can use the money we would have paid to live on for the next 90 days and thus not charge? Or is it better to show the trustee or whoever that at least we kept trying to make the payments. We have never missed a single payment, and at this point our credit rating is excellent. But I realize now that's just because we keep charging to live, and we are able to make the payments on time. I just don't don't know when to stop the insanity. Truthfully, we could live like this for another year, but our debt would rise ridiculously.
Anyway, I guess my question is what to do about the next 90 days? There are a couple things we charged in the last 90 days we could return, i.e., some window blinds ($300). Would that show a good faith effort? Or is it just a pittance anyway? We could borrow some money, too, from family to pay off what we charged in the last 90 days. Should we do that?
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated. We are seeing an attorney next week, but this stuff is weighing on my mind!
Rick
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