Okay, I met with an attorney--he gave me about an hour, really, very nice!
I was really (REALLY) hoping he'd look over the numbers I brought and say "yep, slam dunk--meet you at the courthouse at 8?" This did not happen.
My income is too high (after my recent pay increase, $12k/yr over!) and my debt too low. HAHAHAHAHAHA! okay, seriously, he said that my dischargeable debt of $13500 -something was too low. He asked me if I had considered taking out a loan (I should have asked "are you offering?") or other alternatives--maybe this is standard, maybe not.
Then we discussed the $16,700 in student loan debt that changes the picture, somewhat, though still not enough for his liking.
Then I proceeded to add on the medical and child-related stuff--I have had 2 surgeries in the past 5 years and have a good bit more than average "health" spending in my household--if need be, I can prove it. Same with the kiddo--football and teenagerhood is not cheap--I have put nearly every expense in my life on that trusty old (now burnt) USB debit card--it's time to go back, line-by-line and do some forensics. At a bare minimum, for my own budgetary purposes.
My other concerns: if I stop the direct deposit that I took the cash advance against, is that criminal? Can I protect the $1k that my uncle gave to my son? Were non-issues. Oh yah, I shouldn't charge on the Discover ;P
I kind of had a meltdown and told him that the only reason I even care about chapter 7 over chapter 13 is that I want to be able to have a life. These money issues have taken an extreme toll on my health and, if I'm to survive and be successful long-term, I need to know that there will be an definitive end to this mess. So, I thought I really wouldn't mind a chapter 13, even, at least you get a specific point in the future beyond which you will be FREE! He said no, you really really don't want to do a chapter 13 --too much scrutiny, too expensive, truly I don't think I could handle 5 years on a leash like that--it would kill me!
So...the more questions he asked, the more meaningful they became and by the end, it sounded like he felt there was more merit...it would probably fly for a ch 7, but it will endure extreme scrutiny.
Now I have to search my heart (and my records!) --afterall, if it's truly that "close", maybe I should just suck it up and do the Dave Ramsey snowball. If I truly believe that I can implement my new budget plan and keep control from now on, with some (fairly decent-sized) cuts, I should be able to get back in control of this ship, right?
But, as I told law man: I want to be able to start NOW--I have zero security--if one single thing happens, this house of cards is DONE...and I suppose, that's where some of you are--that last straw came in. But I was congratulating myself for seeing the writing on the wall--do I really have to wait until something horrible happens to file?
And what about my son? In < 1 year, I lose that Earned Income Credit...in < 2 years, he'll be heading for college. I want to be in a position to be able to help him--at least in an emergency or something!!
Oh I just don't know.
But I do finally GET the means test now. The bloody test is not a pass/fail, you folks go ch7, you all go ch13, type of thing. The test is just a guide--that's why my case is harder--the means test is really no issue at all, but you have to be ready to support your numbers at any point in the process. All the way through to closure. And, with me being so #%^*$&* RICH, I'd likely get audited and everything.
Great.
Oh, last thing: I had suspected that this would not be the attorney I retain, if I do so. This was Mr. Right Now. I could not get in to see Mr. Right until the 30th --the latter was recommended by an atty friend of the family that doesn't do bk...he also did one of my uncle's bk's (other side of the family) so, I have a feeling he will be a LOT more experienced.
Plus this guy made a lot of assumptions. First on all the financial stuff ...then he was walking through his questionnaire with me and on "marital status" he had already written in "divorced" and asked me about my divorce date before he learned that I never married. Don't like assumptions one little bit--it just shows that the person makes a habit of relying on prior knowledge rather than verification.
Anyway, sorry so long. I thought I would put it ALL out there as, I'm sure something is new and can help someone else.
I was really (REALLY) hoping he'd look over the numbers I brought and say "yep, slam dunk--meet you at the courthouse at 8?" This did not happen.
My income is too high (after my recent pay increase, $12k/yr over!) and my debt too low. HAHAHAHAHAHA! okay, seriously, he said that my dischargeable debt of $13500 -something was too low. He asked me if I had considered taking out a loan (I should have asked "are you offering?") or other alternatives--maybe this is standard, maybe not.
Then we discussed the $16,700 in student loan debt that changes the picture, somewhat, though still not enough for his liking.
Then I proceeded to add on the medical and child-related stuff--I have had 2 surgeries in the past 5 years and have a good bit more than average "health" spending in my household--if need be, I can prove it. Same with the kiddo--football and teenagerhood is not cheap--I have put nearly every expense in my life on that trusty old (now burnt) USB debit card--it's time to go back, line-by-line and do some forensics. At a bare minimum, for my own budgetary purposes.
My other concerns: if I stop the direct deposit that I took the cash advance against, is that criminal? Can I protect the $1k that my uncle gave to my son? Were non-issues. Oh yah, I shouldn't charge on the Discover ;P
I kind of had a meltdown and told him that the only reason I even care about chapter 7 over chapter 13 is that I want to be able to have a life. These money issues have taken an extreme toll on my health and, if I'm to survive and be successful long-term, I need to know that there will be an definitive end to this mess. So, I thought I really wouldn't mind a chapter 13, even, at least you get a specific point in the future beyond which you will be FREE! He said no, you really really don't want to do a chapter 13 --too much scrutiny, too expensive, truly I don't think I could handle 5 years on a leash like that--it would kill me!
So...the more questions he asked, the more meaningful they became and by the end, it sounded like he felt there was more merit...it would probably fly for a ch 7, but it will endure extreme scrutiny.
Now I have to search my heart (and my records!) --afterall, if it's truly that "close", maybe I should just suck it up and do the Dave Ramsey snowball. If I truly believe that I can implement my new budget plan and keep control from now on, with some (fairly decent-sized) cuts, I should be able to get back in control of this ship, right?
But, as I told law man: I want to be able to start NOW--I have zero security--if one single thing happens, this house of cards is DONE...and I suppose, that's where some of you are--that last straw came in. But I was congratulating myself for seeing the writing on the wall--do I really have to wait until something horrible happens to file?
And what about my son? In < 1 year, I lose that Earned Income Credit...in < 2 years, he'll be heading for college. I want to be in a position to be able to help him--at least in an emergency or something!!
Oh I just don't know.
But I do finally GET the means test now. The bloody test is not a pass/fail, you folks go ch7, you all go ch13, type of thing. The test is just a guide--that's why my case is harder--the means test is really no issue at all, but you have to be ready to support your numbers at any point in the process. All the way through to closure. And, with me being so #%^*$&* RICH, I'd likely get audited and everything.
Great.
Oh, last thing: I had suspected that this would not be the attorney I retain, if I do so. This was Mr. Right Now. I could not get in to see Mr. Right until the 30th --the latter was recommended by an atty friend of the family that doesn't do bk...he also did one of my uncle's bk's (other side of the family) so, I have a feeling he will be a LOT more experienced.
Plus this guy made a lot of assumptions. First on all the financial stuff ...then he was walking through his questionnaire with me and on "marital status" he had already written in "divorced" and asked me about my divorce date before he learned that I never married. Don't like assumptions one little bit--it just shows that the person makes a habit of relying on prior knowledge rather than verification.
Anyway, sorry so long. I thought I would put it ALL out there as, I'm sure something is new and can help someone else.
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