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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

 

"You will find, as you look back upon your life, that the moments that stand out are

the moments when you have done things for others"

Henry Drummond

Thanks for that reminder of what is good in this world.  I'm sure you are a truly blessed person.

Albert- Maybe you could pull  your kids out of private school. The tuition money should be enough to save your house. I know public school isn't the best, but it beats being homeless.

I am reading and don't like about having kids but,  can't afford them.  You are not on welfare nor do you take from somone else to put food in your childrens mouths.  I have children and donot regret any of them.  Children are a gift from GOD and how you handle that gift is what counts.  I may not have a lot but, the love of all of my children is what keeps me going.  Chris,  You sound like an arrogant shallow person,  GOD does not like UGLY..  

"It is the action, not the fruit of the action, that's important.  You have to do the right thing.   It may not be in your power, may be not in your time, that there'll be any fruit. But that doesn't mean you stop doing the right thing.   You may never know what results come from your action"

Ghandi

Donna, you did the right thing.

Yesterday I was driving to on the bank to cash my check and gave a homeless man the only dollar I had. Later that day, I was walking out of a convience store and my daughter was being careless and the door swung back to hit my son in the face.While he was crying another homeless man had a cute chihauhua looking dog that distracted my son from his tears and cheered up. Well we gave him a couple dollars I found in my purse I didn't know I had. AS we are driving away my daughter reminds me of a time I gave a homeless person a ten dollar bill instead of a one and later that day found 40 dollars in a pair of pants I hadn't worn in years.

Life works in mysterious ways...What goes around comes around and as human being if we don't take care of eachother then this world will completely fall apart. If you help someone you know or don't know at least you helped be an active participant in making this world a better place and you made someone's day just a little bit better and it only cost $1. That's an awesome feeling!!!No matter what anyone else says.

God bless you.

You will be successful in whatever you do.

Money is tool meant to be used and shared...not hoarded.  Life gives to the giver and takes from the taker.

This does become a tricky predicament. I have a sister who lived high on the hot for several years with a new husband, in a style that she normally did not do. He stayed long enough to ruin her credit and left her, stripping the house of everything (including things that were already hers before she met him) when he left--a preacher no less.

When he left I really struggled emotionally about rather to give her the only money I had, roughly $600. I had 5 kids still at home and had really struggled just to put that small amount of savings together. We were choosing between needs and needs ourselves. I felt guilty for years.

In the end, I only prayed for her. That was about 15 years ago. In retrospect, I think I did the right thing.  I think she would have just taken my money, not realized or appreciated the tremendous struggle to get it, and gone on living above her means as soon as she could manage it again as that is just what she is doing now.

Chris and Beth,

It must be wonderful that you have lived up until now not ever needing help for anything...awesome!  How does it feel to ALWAYS have a surplus of money and NEVER having had any sort of financial trouble or needed financial assistance?  You must realize that unless you paid cash up front and in full for everything you "own" you needed the financial assistance from banks.  The banks "loaned" you the money to buy the car you drive in and the home you live in.  Otherwise, you would have had to pay up front.  We're all basically in the same spot as Donna's friend; we can't always do it alone and we've all (you, too) looked to other friend, family and banks to help us out.

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