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What if a friend were losing her home?

Posted Oct 17 2008, 03:07 AM by Donna Freedman
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Last July, a fellow driving an SUV called me a sucker for giving money to a homeless man. The incident upset me deeply, so I wrote an essay called "Why I gave a guy a dollar."

What I didn't mention in the piece was how I happened to be walking down that particular street. I was on my way home from the bank and the post office, having just mailed a cashier's check to a long-time friend whose home was about to be foreclosed upon.

She and her husband have three kids still at home, and in the past year they've both had spells of unemployment. They'd been late with the house note before, and this time the mortgage company issued an ultimatum: two months' worth of payments by July 16, or foreclosure.

The two of them had just gotten jobs but wouldn't be paid until after that deadline. The mortgage company was implacable. She was scraping together loans from every possible friend and relative, but nobody could afford to give much.

So I went to the bank.

Could I afford this?
Walking home, I had cold chills thinking about how close they came to losing the home they've had for 10 years. Theirs wasn't a subprime loan; a combination of low wages, bad breaks and, yeah, a couple of unwise choices landed them deeply in the red.

They say you should never lend more than you can afford to lose. Strictly speaking, I couldn't afford to lose anything. But my friends couldn't afford to lose their home, either.

Renting an apartment would have cost almost as much as their mortgage payment, assuming a landlord would even look at a family with trashed credit and three boys under 14. And assuming they could have come up with first and last months' rent.

I don't expect to be paid back for a long time. In fact, some people to whom I've lent money in the past wound up repaying only part of it. Sometimes, life just happens that way. But my friend is a woman of her word and I believe I will see the money eventually.

What about all the others?
This was an object lesson for me: The reason I could make the loan is that I've been frugal. Because I've been careful with the money I've earned in the past year, and because I was fortunate to sell some artwork recently, I had enough to spare.

Some people would call me an idiot for lending money when my own future is not secure. But during my lifetime I have been helped when I was down, so I return those favors by helping others.

Besides, what should I have done? Let her end up on the street because payday fell after July 16?

I felt then, and feel now, a kind of cold despair about all the untold stories, the folks in desperate financial straits who have no one to float them a short-term loan. How many Americans are suffering and, to add insult to injury, are being written off as lazy or stupid?

I guess that's why it bothered me so much when I saw the homeless man, and when that guy in the flashy vehicle second-guessed my decision to give.

Comments

 

nous meritons toutes nos rencontres.

you were supposed to be there and who knows how the dollar changed the man's life.  

your friend is your friend... and that is why you did what you wanted to do.  

we all do what we want to do.  so for all the objections. ....  you can listen and get upset and shrug and say.... maybe so.  

bonne chance

I was reading your experience and suddenly,I realized i am the one who helps out unconditionally.Friends called me very crazy,ends up in a bad argument.But guess what?Based on my experience,despite they never helped me back,when I need help ...or when I am down,people helps me out without questions.God has so many ways to give you back  more blessings........

I am inspired by your generousity. I have long admired your frugality and now I also admire your kindness.

If only more people were as empathetic as you.  Until people walk in those shoes of unemployment and the threat of losing their home, the empathy is not thinkable.  I am currently unemployed and my mortgage is behind three months.  When you reach this point, you begin to have no hope because the phone stops ringing and the offers stop coming.  I am a middle age woman with a degree who will be on the street around Christmas and your article was nice.  I've learned it won't change anything but it was nice

Me and my husband two children, are about to loose our home we have had for 12 years, my children were raised. I did not make much money money working for phonics ect. for kindercare, but I had a seizure at work. I sort help. from a co. I won't mission the nam and lose consolidation with my lender. I now have a pt time job and I have been patient and wait for their negotiations with a lender. I have no other choice. My house is up for auction. I put my faith in them. I had too bad credit to find a place to rent. My children will have no roof over their heads. I can't rent I don't know what Im going to do. I say this because.  I feel better knowing you have helped some who has helped people like me. Thank You.

what about medical hardship???  Breast cancer, operations over five years, and one year of 5 surguries not having to do with breast cancer and one that does.  Credit card debt to pay for those surguries  cause they hound you??? Why does this country have 80% of bankrupties due to medical hardship.  And why do the elected officials of this country not have to pay for their lifetime of medical benefits. We have one superbly screwed up country......

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