Avoiding The Stress Of Coping With Debt As A Senior
We live in a consumer society where the mentality is that if we cannot afford something then we should use the credit that we have been offered by various loans companies to buy now and pay later. This is all well and good if you can afford to pay later, but a high number of people cannot afford that luxury and get further and further into debt as a result. Being in debt can be a humiliating and frustrating experience because, once you are in it, it proves to be near on impossible to get out of it. Credit companies thrive on this because it is how they make their profits. However, seniors suffer more than most as a result of it because most seniors do not have the means to pay back debts as readily as younger people do. They cannot go out and earn more money in order to pay back loans and credit cards. It is just not that simple for them. However, there are solutions to this pressing problem.
Debt is not an individual problem; it is an issue for a high percentage of society. Whilst this is not a comforting thought and doesn’t help an individual senior’s plight, it has resulted in the introduction of various services that will offer solutions to the problem of debt in general. If you cannot pay loans back, then counselling and debt services can be called upon to offer you free advice and act as a liaison between you and the debt companies. This should only be a last resort because it can affect your credit rating. However, if you are having problems with debt then you are unlikely to want to get into that situation in a hurry again! However, this is where the “just in case” theory comes in. You never know what will happen to you in the future and thus it is best to leave your options open if at all possible.
There are many things that an individual senior can try to work his or her way out of debt, but not literally. However, before even attempting to come up with solutions to any financial problems you may have, you must first make a detailed plan of your financial situation. You must work out your exact incomings and outgoings, using your personal records from the last six months. Calculate your average expenditure in relation to your income, and then you are fully equipped to design payment plans for yourself as well as trying to come up with plausible and realistic ways to cut the amount you are spending. After all, that is where the debt came from and that is also where cuts should be made to accommodate that.
Another option is to contact the credit companies themselves and ask for your account to be frozen. Most companies will then be quite happy to work with you to put a payment scheme in place, where you pay a set amount every month until your debt is cleared. You will then have the option of closing the credit account or reinstating it. Companies are usually happy enough to do this because it means that they will make a profit. If they have to sell your debt on to a specialist company because you are failing to make payments every month, they will not even recoup the money that you own them, let alone the interest. This should be attempted before going to a negotiation service because it will not affect your credit.
Sorting out your debts is all about making the right decisions for you. Your main priority is to make sure that your debts are reduced and then kept in check. You need to make the first move in order for this to happen, but you will feel the weight lift off your shoulder as soon as you do!