Please. Financial aid that someone else paid for. Fully supportive of financial aid for those who work (or are unable to work) and still cannot afford the cost of college. Just come on this board and ask about chasing down merit dollars. |
My parents cut me off for not liking a boyfriend. You can’t read. They lived in NY. I was in MD. There was no college where they lived anyway because they lived in a world area where there were no colleges. I literally went to the public university nearby like I said and sat down with their financial aid office and my private college financial aid office and transferring would not have been cheaper I still had to pay my parents expected family contribution and the tuition was equal due to my scholarship I had to take loans for the rest that it did not cover and I had to cover my only cost of living which included room and board school supplies etc. I was not in my parents health insurance I did not have any money whatsoever and I did not speak to them for five years. There was no living at home as an option. I was completely cut off and I had to pay what the government said they had to pay with taking out a combination of the federal loans and the remaining being private loans at a bank at an interest rate three times higher than federal loans. Your foreigner friends had family support and they had little to no income so they didn’t have a family expected contribution and they could live at home. Once again, this was not my scenario. |
Nice try. I worked 30 hours a week the entire de of college. |
I am sorry to hear that. However, if you choose to move into with a man your parents disprove, they are not required to finance your household. He (the boyfriend) should have supported you. You could have worked and saved for couple years before going to college and accumulating loans. Hope all worked out with that boyfriend. As to my college, my husband paid for it: I married at 21 right out of parents' house and he just gave me a check for 4 years tuition. I married well and divorced even better. Women have powers - your parents have nothing to do with that |
You’re single parents expected financial contribution was likely a lot less than my parents. You do not get it. It is based on parent income. Some parents are expected to pay a lot and some parents are not expected to pay very much and some parents are expected to pay none at all… It is a flaw in the system that it assumes that wealthier parents and middle class parents will pay because of those parents don’t pay it puts the students in the position of having to pay it themselves and no going to a public college is not necessarily cheaper. It is alarming that none of you understand financial aid at all and that there are situations where students are screwed. If your parents are poor or they don’t make a lot of money it’s easy to take out loans what you’re not understanding is that the amount I had to pay because that was their expected contribution exceeded the federal loan limits which meet meant I had to go to a bank and take out private loans. I had to pay my living expenses not just tuition. Tuition was mostly covered by my scholarship but I still had to pay for everything else housing food supplies, health insurance, books, etc. also at that time kids were not on their parents insurance in college and I had to get my own. And it’s a shame that you didn’t know that the cost of college can be mostly covered by private institutions if you just apply and get a financial aid package. The cost of a private college is almost never the sticker price. Families are expected to pay a certain amount regardless of which institution you attend so public and private often end up being about the same if you get additional aid or a scholarship. My best friend went for a private college her parents didn’t make much money and her college was completely covered by financial aid and she didn’t even have to take out any loans whereas my parents refuse to pay and they were expected to pay a high amount and I ended up with $70,000 in debt whereas she walked away debt-free and we both attended private colleges. It is all dependent on your parents’ financial situation. |
I didn’t live with my boyfriend I was just dating somebody on campus. I lived in a dorm. It wasn’t serious at the time. |
Also, I was not interested in a serious relationship. I was just dating. I had no plans to marry before 30. My education mattered to me. My parents going postal and giving me a huge debt load on purpose because they are racist is pure evil. They would have never done that to a son. It wasn’t serious and I didn’t even tell them about the boyfriend they spying on me and found out that I was going on some dates then called the financial aid office and told him never to send them a bill again and then they called me and told me that I had to figure it out because I had to pay what that contribution was and the public university down the street said the same thing and said that the cost would be equal in fact if I transferred I would end up paying more because a lot of my credits wouldn’t transfer and I would have to stay in college longer. I wanted to get my degree. I was not overly focused on a man like you suggest and like you were because there was no way in hell I was getting married at 21. |
It was silly of you to loose parents support because of a non-serous relationship. You should have better focused on education or finding a husband who would support you. Yes, I invested my 20s into someone birthing kids, taking care of a large house and cooking dinners and thus that somebody financed my college. And I am more than well off now after divorce with decent job. Everyone makes own choices |
What part of I did not want to get married did you not understand? Also, I did not do anything. They spied on me and found out. I did not tell them—there was no reason to. They made the decision. Not me. Personally, I feel that it was an excuse to just not help. Also, not all marriages are like yours. Husbands do not just support their wives. I married at 32. He would not allow me to not work. Even with kids. I divorced 10 years later. I was an equal contributor income wise. I did not get a free ride like you did. Stop being so sanctimonious. Some people are not as lucky as you. And no one should intentionally try to financially ruin their kid on purpose when they are starting their adult life. |
OK then... something's not adding up in your story. If you worked 30 hours a week at minimum wage in the late 90s (~5.50 an hour), 46 weeks out of the year, you would have brought in almost $7600. Yet you took out 10k in loans per year? |
New poster here. And you make a choice to be a raging bxxch. Good job, you excel at it! |
Ew - your sense of entitlement is gross. Your parents do not owe you a college education. |
| This was similar to my family growing up- although my mom went back to work as a paraeducator when I was in middle school and my youngest sibling started ES. She didn’t have a college degree so the type of jobs she worked wouldn’t have made enough money to cover childcare for us, so being a SAHM made sense. I think they somehow thought we’d get a lot of need based aid but my dad made enough that I didn’t get much in terms of grants. I got some merit based scholarships but ended up with a lot of loans. They also encouraged me to apply to private schools as they thought those were more prestigious and I bought into that too. Should have gone to a state school. Anyway, it all worked out but the loans were a constant stress in my 20s/early 30s and I missed out on getting a good jump on retirement savings and travel. |
If you stay at home with your kids, you work. Just bc domestic work is undervalued doesn’t mean it isn’t work. My spouse is a 7 figure earner with long hours and lots of travel. I’m at home to give our kids some consistency. And we both appreciate the work that the other person does for our family. |
This is a fair thing to say we pre-school age kids. With school age? I dunno... I had a several month lapse in employment when my kids were in late elementary, and it was honestly the easiest time of my life. I did everything that I usually crammed into the post-work and weekend hours during the school days, had time to read the news, work out, was fresh and in a good mood, all while job searching, too. I wasn't idle by any means, but lets just say it was LIESURELY compared to my usual grind. I work to ensure a comfortable retirement and to have enough money to send the kids to college debt free and to have a bit left over to help them launch w/ downpayment or business start-up help. It would be selfish of me to quit my job and give that up... even though I LOVED my short SAHM stint. |