You are not UMC, you are dangerously poor and never likely to be anything but. You can dress it up all you like; you will live in debt for the bulk of your life, and you will have nothing to leave to your children. |
I'll give you that I'm not UMC, but I don't be in debt for the bulk of my life. My student loans will be discharged one way or another after 10 years or, at most, 25 years from my income based repayments. I also have my assets worked out so that they are protected in the event that there is some student loan fiasco and the loans enter default. A lot of you seem to have a major problem with the fact that I am not going to actually pay the astronomical balance of my student loans after years of accruing interest. You really think I'm going to labor away any more years to pay an unsecured $600k debt at 8% interest? That would be foolish. |
Wow, you think you are so smart. |
What, living up to your word, making good on your promise, would be foolish? You took on those debts knowing what the terms were, end of story. |
What's UMC? |
What esteemed institution educated you? I need to makes sure my kids stay away , I dont want them to emerge as financially illiterate as you. You were royally ripped off. |
WTH. You are not going to repay your loans? You were just stupid when you took out those loans, now this makes you fraud too. |
I am fascinated by how mean people are on this post. it makes sense to buy a small townhome honestly if you have student loan debt because otherwise you are throwing away money on rent and mortgage. I suspect after 20 years OP will have almost paid off all the loans, the mortgage, and will have had a steady salary increase such that they could save for retirement. It really is about long term planning at this point for OP. |
A piece of work and a fraud to boot! Life does not work well for these types in the long run. |
What the OP is proposing at this point is defaulting on her student loans like its de rigueur. |
In what world will this happen? Good luck with that. |
Are you planning to file bankruptcy? |
Of course I'm not going to declare bankruptcy. For one, student loans are not dischargeable in bankruptcy. Second, I have no other financial problems other than a huge student loan balance. I will say that if I could jettison my student loans in bankruptcy I would totally do it and restart my financial life from zero. |
And that is why the government doesn't allow this. Everyone who just graduated from college/grad school with no assets would simply declare bankruptcy. They'd have nothing to lose. It would be unsustainable, which is why the government can't afford to change this rule. I personallly think public service loan forgiveness should be for state schools only and repayment capped at a reasonable amount. You made a lot of bad decisions OP. |
I agree that OP is out of her mind, but I understand what she's saying about the house. She and her DH likely titled the house as "tenants by the entirety" (my house is titled this way too.) It is a legal protection reserved for married couples basically meaning that the "marriage" owns the house rather then either individual. If either she or her DH are sued for any reason by a creditor, they can't access the home equity for an individual debt. Since the student loans are individual debt, the home equity is untouchable. All married people should title their homes this way - its completely free to do so if done at the time of purchase and provides a ton of protection and no down side. |