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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Staying Motivated With CC Debt Payoff
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<blockquote data-quote="ford fanatic" data-source="post: 14575732" data-attributes="member: 47466"><p>I was kind of in your situation about 8 years ago. </p><p></p><p>I was in a marriage where my wife didn't want to work anymore, we weren't married long and she decided to quit her job to stay home with her daughter instead of sending her to daycare. So i pretty much turned into her sugar daddy. Needless to say the marriage didn't last much longer and we had built up a mountain of CC debt in the 3 years we were married. </p><p></p><p>After we separated I went out and replaced the mustang that I had to sell while we were together and also bought a really nice 7.3 Powerstroke while I was at it. So then came the divorce and I was left with all of the outstanding debt, and had to pay for the new Jeep wrangler she had. Some how I managed to get all of my debt onto one non secured credit card....and I was bitter and thought about just walking away from the loan and taking a hit to my credit. But i'm not that kind of guy and i'm glad now that I didn't. </p><p></p><p>I took me about 2 years of working every bit of OT I could get from work and selling my diesel and mustang (all while paying my mortgage and all my other bills) but I finally paid it off. I had saved until I wrote a check for $46K which was the amout that was left after a few years of paying it down. It felt good and was a huge weight off my shoulders.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ford fanatic, post: 14575732, member: 47466"] I was kind of in your situation about 8 years ago. I was in a marriage where my wife didn't want to work anymore, we weren't married long and she decided to quit her job to stay home with her daughter instead of sending her to daycare. So i pretty much turned into her sugar daddy. Needless to say the marriage didn't last much longer and we had built up a mountain of CC debt in the 3 years we were married. After we separated I went out and replaced the mustang that I had to sell while we were together and also bought a really nice 7.3 Powerstroke while I was at it. So then came the divorce and I was left with all of the outstanding debt, and had to pay for the new Jeep wrangler she had. Some how I managed to get all of my debt onto one non secured credit card....and I was bitter and thought about just walking away from the loan and taking a hit to my credit. But i'm not that kind of guy and i'm glad now that I didn't. I took me about 2 years of working every bit of OT I could get from work and selling my diesel and mustang (all while paying my mortgage and all my other bills) but I finally paid it off. I had saved until I wrote a check for $46K which was the amout that was left after a few years of paying it down. It felt good and was a huge weight off my shoulders. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Staying Motivated With CC Debt Payoff
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