Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash advances are at 4-5% for the fee and 0% for the balance for a year. Then you find another card.
Two grow-up people haven't built enough credit to get that from a card? Any card. That's why you build credit and relationship with banks.
Op here. Do you know how I find these offers? Do they come in the mail? Our credit scores are 800+, we could charge probably $150k today on all our credit cards but what I need is CASH to pay mortgage and childcare costs.
Do your daycares not take credit cards?
Op here. My childcare situation is complex and multifaceted, and no, I can’t use credit cards to pay for it.
OP, several people have asked you; how old are your kids? It seems some people are assuming your kids are infants in full time daycare. From the above, it sounds like your children's care is a nanny?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash advances are at 4-5% for the fee and 0% for the balance for a year. Then you find another card.
Two grow-up people haven't built enough credit to get that from a card? Any card. That's why you build credit and relationship with banks.
Op here. Do you know how I find these offers? Do they come in the mail? Our credit scores are 800+, we could charge probably $150k today on all our credit cards but what I need is CASH to pay mortgage and childcare costs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash advances are at 4-5% for the fee and 0% for the balance for a year. Then you find another card.
Two grow-up people haven't built enough credit to get that from a card? Any card. That's why you build credit and relationship with banks.
Op here. Do you know how I find these offers? Do they come in the mail? Our credit scores are 800+, we could charge probably $150k today on all our credit cards but what I need is CASH to pay mortgage and childcare costs.
Do your daycares not take credit cards?
Op here. My childcare situation is complex and multifaceted, and no, I can’t use credit cards to pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash advances are at 4-5% for the fee and 0% for the balance for a year. Then you find another card.
Two grow-up people haven't built enough credit to get that from a card? Any card. That's why you build credit and relationship with banks.
Op here. Do you know how I find these offers? Do they come in the mail? Our credit scores are 800+, we could charge probably $150k today on all our credit cards but what I need is CASH to pay mortgage and childcare costs.
Do your daycares not take credit cards?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cash advances are at 4-5% for the fee and 0% for the balance for a year. Then you find another card.
Two grow-up people haven't built enough credit to get that from a card? Any card. That's why you build credit and relationship with banks.
Op here. Do you know how I find these offers? Do they come in the mail? Our credit scores are 800+, we could charge probably $150k today on all our credit cards but what I need is CASH to pay mortgage and childcare costs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y'all are so off topic. OP's kids are small and don't have mental health issues. She was just living to the max and it bit her in the a$$.
My child was diagnosed with a mental health condition when she was 2.5 yo. We've spent thousands on therapy for that condition.
Also to add, none of the therapists that treat that condition are in-network for any insurance.
So you use your health insurance, and the following year you budget for it. No one is saying medical costs are not obnoxious, but they’re hardly surprising. That’s literally t kohe point of health insurance - to limit surprises and allow you to budget. You are bad with money if your kids’ multi-year health condition frequently made you broke.
We did not go broke (thanks for your concern, lol) but it was tough. We have an only child and it was thousands for 6 months of weekly appointments with one therapist. We are privileged that was all our child needed.
I don't think you understand what it means that none of the high quality therapists take insurance. Sure, we could have stuck with the awful therapist that was in network, but it would have been a waste of time and money, because it wouldn't have done anything for our child. That doesn't change from one year to another. And no, with young children the needs are not predictable.
Wild guess but OP you sound like someone who probably supports universal health care. This exact statement is why I take approximately zero of you seriously.
I'm not OP. I am someone who has lived in a country with universal healthcare, and yes I think that would be better in many ways. I got much better mental health care there than I have here. I certainly don't see how it would be worse than our current system.
We have universal for military, low income and seniors and I can tell you from my experiences it sucks and its near impossible to get medical care.
You can get therapists who are decent to take insurance but you have to be flexible and reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Cash advances are at 4-5% for the fee and 0% for the balance for a year. Then you find another card.
Two grow-up people haven't built enough credit to get that from a card? Any card. That's why you build credit and relationship with banks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y'all are so off topic. OP's kids are small and don't have mental health issues. She was just living to the max and it bit her in the a$$.
My child was diagnosed with a mental health condition when she was 2.5 yo. We've spent thousands on therapy for that condition.
Also to add, none of the therapists that treat that condition are in-network for any insurance.
So you use your health insurance, and the following year you budget for it. No one is saying medical costs are not obnoxious, but they’re hardly surprising. That’s literally t kohe point of health insurance - to limit surprises and allow you to budget. You are bad with money if your kids’ multi-year health condition frequently made you broke.
We did not go broke (thanks for your concern, lol) but it was tough. We have an only child and it was thousands for 6 months of weekly appointments with one therapist. We are privileged that was all our child needed.
I don't think you understand what it means that none of the high quality therapists take insurance. Sure, we could have stuck with the awful therapist that was in network, but it would have been a waste of time and money, because it wouldn't have done anything for our child. That doesn't change from one year to another. And no, with young children the needs are not predictable.
You were lucky it was only for 6 months and thousands. Many of us pay far more for far longer. But we budget to make it work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y'all are so off topic. OP's kids are small and don't have mental health issues. She was just living to the max and it bit her in the a$$.
My child was diagnosed with a mental health condition when she was 2.5 yo. We've spent thousands on therapy for that condition.
Also to add, none of the therapists that treat that condition are in-network for any insurance.
So you use your health insurance, and the following year you budget for it. No one is saying medical costs are not obnoxious, but they’re hardly surprising. That’s literally t kohe point of health insurance - to limit surprises and allow you to budget. You are bad with money if your kids’ multi-year health condition frequently made you broke.
We did not go broke (thanks for your concern, lol) but it was tough. We have an only child and it was thousands for 6 months of weekly appointments with one therapist. We are privileged that was all our child needed.
I don't think you understand what it means that none of the high quality therapists take insurance. Sure, we could have stuck with the awful therapist that was in network, but it would have been a waste of time and money, because it wouldn't have done anything for our child. That doesn't change from one year to another. And no, with young children the needs are not predictable.
Wild guess but OP you sound like someone who probably supports universal health care. This exact statement is why I take approximately zero of you seriously.
I'm not OP. I am someone who has lived in a country with universal healthcare, and yes I think that would be better in many ways. I got much better mental health care there than I have here. I certainly don't see how it would be worse than our current system.
We have universal for military, low income and seniors and I can tell you from my experiences it sucks and its near impossible to get medical care.
You can get therapists who are decent to take insurance but you have to be flexible and reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y'all are so off topic. OP's kids are small and don't have mental health issues. She was just living to the max and it bit her in the a$$.
My child was diagnosed with a mental health condition when she was 2.5 yo. We've spent thousands on therapy for that condition.
Also to add, none of the therapists that treat that condition are in-network for any insurance.
So you use your health insurance, and the following year you budget for it. No one is saying medical costs are not obnoxious, but they’re hardly surprising. That’s literally t kohe point of health insurance - to limit surprises and allow you to budget. You are bad with money if your kids’ multi-year health condition frequently made you broke.
We did not go broke (thanks for your concern, lol) but it was tough. We have an only child and it was thousands for 6 months of weekly appointments with one therapist. We are privileged that was all our child needed.
I don't think you understand what it means that none of the high quality therapists take insurance. Sure, we could have stuck with the awful therapist that was in network, but it would have been a waste of time and money, because it wouldn't have done anything for our child. That doesn't change from one year to another. And no, with young children the needs are not predictable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y'all are so off topic. OP's kids are small and don't have mental health issues. She was just living to the max and it bit her in the a$$.
My child was diagnosed with a mental health condition when she was 2.5 yo. We've spent thousands on therapy for that condition.
Also to add, none of the therapists that treat that condition are in-network for any insurance.
So you use your health insurance, and the following year you budget for it. No one is saying medical costs are not obnoxious, but they’re hardly surprising. That’s literally t kohe point of health insurance - to limit surprises and allow you to budget. You are bad with money if your kids’ multi-year health condition frequently made you broke.
We did not go broke (thanks for your concern, lol) but it was tough. We have an only child and it was thousands for 6 months of weekly appointments with one therapist. We are privileged that was all our child needed.
I don't think you understand what it means that none of the high quality therapists take insurance. Sure, we could have stuck with the awful therapist that was in network, but it would have been a waste of time and money, because it wouldn't have done anything for our child. That doesn't change from one year to another. And no, with young children the needs are not predictable.
Wild guess but OP you sound like someone who probably supports universal health care. This exact statement is why I take approximately zero of you seriously.
I'm not OP. I am someone who has lived in a country with universal healthcare, and yes I think that would be better in many ways. I got much better mental health care there than I have here. I certainly don't see how it would be worse than our current system.