It was hilarious, because I was TERRIFIED this morning at my 341 meeting and of course, he called me up FIRST. Oh boy.
We went through the meeting, I answered the questions and then at the end, he made a comment about how filing pro se is a very complicated, very difficult endeavor to achieve successfully and he wanted to thank me for making his job easier by filling everything out perfectly and filing everything correctly. He literally said "I am very impressed with this."
I said thank you, but inside I was like "Oh yeah, I just saved myself $2,000!"
So for those of you who want to go pro se, but are scared - it can be done and can be done well. Research research research. I am extremely OCD, so I researched almost every waking hour that I wasn't at work for a good 3 week before I even started filling out forms. You don't want to make mistakes.
My case was also pretty straightforward - a credit card that closed the account (only had a couple hundred on it), a car that I am keeping and a house I am surrendering. I don't have 401ks or stocks or IRA's or investment interest in anything, etc. That would probably make it more difficult.
But I wanted to tell you - it can be done if you want it bad enough (and don't want to spend the money bad enough!)
We went through the meeting, I answered the questions and then at the end, he made a comment about how filing pro se is a very complicated, very difficult endeavor to achieve successfully and he wanted to thank me for making his job easier by filling everything out perfectly and filing everything correctly. He literally said "I am very impressed with this."
I said thank you, but inside I was like "Oh yeah, I just saved myself $2,000!"
So for those of you who want to go pro se, but are scared - it can be done and can be done well. Research research research. I am extremely OCD, so I researched almost every waking hour that I wasn't at work for a good 3 week before I even started filling out forms. You don't want to make mistakes.
My case was also pretty straightforward - a credit card that closed the account (only had a couple hundred on it), a car that I am keeping and a house I am surrendering. I don't have 401ks or stocks or IRA's or investment interest in anything, etc. That would probably make it more difficult.
But I wanted to tell you - it can be done if you want it bad enough (and don't want to spend the money bad enough!)
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