You would have had a leg blown off, and suffering from depression.In retrospect of my life, had I known what I know now, I would have done that.
Of course, when I was graduating college Bush was still in office, so I was definitely a littleto even THINK about the military.
She a doctor / dentist. All she gotta do is live below her means for a bit, then she'll be aight
How did you get a custom smiley in your sig brehDebt enslavement is a real problem that affects God knows how many people today.
If there isn't serious, stringent legislation passed to curtail banks' autonomy to structure rates and repayment plans, we're looking at a perverse financial future.


So many L's
Michigan finessed her.
You spent $285,000 to get a degree in Asian Nail Filing Techniques and you want my hard earned tax money to pay for your mistake? I think not.
My mom took out 60k in loans and paid it off in like 5 years but she's a nurse practitioner so she made more than enough to do that.
I am 57 years old, still paying my student loans from 1983, and paying student loans for my two daughters. I joke it will be on my cemetery headstone, "still paying student loans".
I am over 60 with over $100K in student debt for two kids with dreams of graduating college and getting a good start in their lives. They each have $20K of debt. I will use half of my retirement to avoid getting sunk by these predatory lenders tricks but my daughters will be saddled with monthly payments from graduation day for the next 10 years. This is what happens when capitalism fails and the capitalist begin eating their own.
I was also pressured by my family to go to college; they had no intentions of helping me pay for it though. I had to move out into my own apt at 18. I graduated but have been stuck in the same retail job i was 10 years ago because no one would hire me "without experience" even though i went to school for 5 years and have $73,000 worth in federal debt on top of another $12,000 in a private loan. I applied for hundreds of jobs "in my field" for 2 years after graduation, civil service tests and everything. There was nothing i was offered that wouldve even came close to helping me pay off my loans let alone survive; $11.50 to work at kidspeace, $12 for TSS position that offered no benefits, health insurance and couldnt guarantee full time hrs. I decided to go back for a trade school this time in the service industry and I do OK with that now but its still not enough. my original loans have over $10,000 in interest alone. I dont have cable, i discontinued my hulu, netflix, even cancelled my life insurance policy, Im going to be cutting my internet soon and just going to the library... i dont know what else to do... im lucky if i make $20,000 a year. There needs to be policies in place for those of us in these situations. I dont want to kill myself really but i also dont want to struggle my entire life and it be a complete waste, working til im dead... we have to do something about this.
I am 4 years into my career after obtaining a masters degree. I borrowed about $85k through government loans, and was sitting at $103k by the time I finished my degree. I have paid $24,333.14 over the four and a half years since finishing (as of 12/31/16). I am now at $107k in total student loan debt.
I have been fortunate to get a good job out of school and have grown in my career since. I want nothing more than to pay back what I borrowed. But interest is locked in the high 7% range for my biggest loans (PLUS) and the high 6% range for the rest.
It is so demoralizing and usurious to see so much money paid only to be in MORE debt. That is money I could put toward a house. Or to start a business. Or, most painfully, money that could actually bring down the principle of the loan.
It is crushing.
Supply and demand. Credit being available is part of what's keeping education fees so high. If credit wasn't as available, there would be less demand which would cause prices to drop.I don't agree with this. If you tout education as valuable and the way to get ahead/ensure a well-heeled populace, it's counterproductive to make attending so costly. These cost-of-attendance letters read to the tune of 60k/year..I think I have my old ones lying around somewhere but that's ridiculous for something that's supposed to be the key to the American Dream/whatever.
Loans are on par with the "cost of educating" people, which is bs.
I don't agree with this. If you tout education as valuable and the way to get ahead/ensure a well-heeled populace, it's counterproductive to make attending so costly. These cost-of-attendance letters read to the tune of 60k/year..I think I have my old ones lying around somewhere but that's ridiculous for something that's supposed to be the key to the American Dream/whatever.
Loans are on par with the "cost of educating" people, which is bs.