About six months ago we emerged from Chapter 7 Bankruptcy. Prior to that, I was an avid reader of this forum, and still am, but I have never really thought I had anything to contribute. Now, with some hindsight, I think I might.
There is no shame in bankruptcy. You might as well get that out of your head if it's part of your consideration to file or not to file. If you can file--you should. Even if you're basically doing okay. If you can file a Chapter 7, especially a no asset Chapter 7, and that will relieve you of significant debt--you should do it. Because the truth is, most people cannot. They either make too much money, or they would lose too many assets, or they have school loans and such that can't be erased in bankruptcy.
The truth is, there's no shame in bankruptcy. Not today. If you can file a no asset Chapter 7, you're lucky. We were very lucky that a long time before I lost my job, we transferred all our debts to credit cards with the intent of paying them off one by one. It didn't happen that way because I lost my job, but when it came time to file bankruptcy, we were very lucky--everything was on credit cards and consumer loans. That means every debt disappeard on the day we were discharged (over 80 grand).
I have a new job now (a good one, and I thank God everyday for it). We have credit cards again (but we will never be in debt with them again. We buy on them, then we pay them off twice a month just to build a positive credit history).
The only shame I have, if you can call it that, is that I can't tell people the good news. I feel bad because in my profession, most people didn't pay for college with credit cards the way I did. Most of them have huge student loans that BK won't help. Most have too many assets, or can't be unemployed for any length of time and survive, so they make too much money trying to make ends meet to ever file for Chapter 7.
Therefore, I don't bring it up to them. I know some people who are so broke they are hounded daily by collectors, but they could never scrape together the 1600 to file through a lawyer. The shame--the only shame is that they can't file.
If you can file a Chapter 7, especially a no asset Chapter 7, if you can make that happen, you are blessed. Companies and Countries are doing it daily. It's not the old ethics anymore. Now there are only those who can and those who can't, and I thank God almost everyday that I was one of those who could.
And as for the morality or ethics of it: who's more important to the economy right now? Someone who is spending all their free cash trying to pay off credit cards or mortgages to a bank who got a bailout, or someone who has no debt and is out there consuming again?
But I do feel shame. I feel it for coming in here and posting this when I know many reading it can't file a no asset Chapter 7. But for the sake of those who can and might be thinking they would but it's "wrong" to do so--you need to think again. In today's world, it's almost the reverse--it's almost an ethical duty to do so.
There is no shame in bankruptcy. You might as well get that out of your head if it's part of your consideration to file or not to file. If you can file--you should. Even if you're basically doing okay. If you can file a Chapter 7, especially a no asset Chapter 7, and that will relieve you of significant debt--you should do it. Because the truth is, most people cannot. They either make too much money, or they would lose too many assets, or they have school loans and such that can't be erased in bankruptcy.
The truth is, there's no shame in bankruptcy. Not today. If you can file a no asset Chapter 7, you're lucky. We were very lucky that a long time before I lost my job, we transferred all our debts to credit cards with the intent of paying them off one by one. It didn't happen that way because I lost my job, but when it came time to file bankruptcy, we were very lucky--everything was on credit cards and consumer loans. That means every debt disappeard on the day we were discharged (over 80 grand).
I have a new job now (a good one, and I thank God everyday for it). We have credit cards again (but we will never be in debt with them again. We buy on them, then we pay them off twice a month just to build a positive credit history).
The only shame I have, if you can call it that, is that I can't tell people the good news. I feel bad because in my profession, most people didn't pay for college with credit cards the way I did. Most of them have huge student loans that BK won't help. Most have too many assets, or can't be unemployed for any length of time and survive, so they make too much money trying to make ends meet to ever file for Chapter 7.
Therefore, I don't bring it up to them. I know some people who are so broke they are hounded daily by collectors, but they could never scrape together the 1600 to file through a lawyer. The shame--the only shame is that they can't file.
If you can file a Chapter 7, especially a no asset Chapter 7, if you can make that happen, you are blessed. Companies and Countries are doing it daily. It's not the old ethics anymore. Now there are only those who can and those who can't, and I thank God almost everyday that I was one of those who could.
And as for the morality or ethics of it: who's more important to the economy right now? Someone who is spending all their free cash trying to pay off credit cards or mortgages to a bank who got a bailout, or someone who has no debt and is out there consuming again?
But I do feel shame. I feel it for coming in here and posting this when I know many reading it can't file a no asset Chapter 7. But for the sake of those who can and might be thinking they would but it's "wrong" to do so--you need to think again. In today's world, it's almost the reverse--it's almost an ethical duty to do so.
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