| Cheaters have to a lot of times. |
| My SIL does this. She has credit problems and likely has debt collectors calling her. |
| Criminal activity. Report them to the local police. |
|
I’ve had the same number since 1996!
First bag car phone (Nokia, $9.99/month, just allowed emergency calls) |
| The only time I changed my cell phone number is when we moved from the California to Virginia. I know you don't "have to" change your phone number, but my kids were going to a private school that required a "local area code" phone number for the phone tree (this was about 15 years ago.) If I kept my old area code, they were going to require me to give them one of my neighbor's phone numbers and then they would have called my neighbors to relay messages to me instead of calling my "out of the area' phone number. Obviously I wasn't about to put my neighbors in that position so we changed our phone numbers to a local area code. |
Lol police aren't going to come arrest a dude for changing his number. |
*Not smart enough. Also if they don't pay their bill regularly, they lose the number. |
That's definitely something old people do. |
And pursued through multiple number changes? |
Seriously. You’re not real DMV folk without a 301,202 or 703. |
You ever see taxis or lawyers with 777-7777 or 222-2222 numbers? Those are low-digit numbers. When cell phones became mainstream the telcos released large tranches of new numbers with previously unused prefixes. So for instance if you live in NW DC you'll notice lots of 202-966-xxxx or 202-363-xxxx numbers because those were the traditional landline prefixes. People who got cell phones early got first pick of the desirable numbers from the new prefixes, either low, sequential, or memorable digits. |
| My friend is paranoid and has changed her number 4 times in the past 5 years. She says her phone keeps getting hacked. The “hackers” are men she has dated from the apps. |
She sounds unstable. |
So you're saying it's a smart thing to do, I agree. With age comes wisdom. Keeping the same number long term indicates a stable life. I choose that. |
| I have a bipolar relative who does this frequently. |