that's what i was going to say. my bank keeps trying to give me money. I owe them, you know, a few *thousand* dollars (although not on credit cards, phew, only a bit there ;), don't own anything but my shoes and my bed, and yet! They think I'm awesome. Apparently they don't remember those letter of suing I got in my early twenties ;)
That's what's so depressing, to me: I went through all this, with the credit cards AND the loans, and I got them all paid off, and then I moved to Chicago and racked up CC debt again and went back for my Master's.
They'll remember a different truth if you ever ask them for more than they want to give you. My credit card company remembers I told them I was unemployed, even though I was still making every payment for more than the minimum, so I still have a crazy high interest rate.
I foolishly tried to get enough of a credit limit that I could pay for something big, if need be, while in Italy. The card with a $700 limit that I'd never let be paid late or go over the limit, it wouldn't give me a cent more. Does that make sense? Luckily I had a card that was being paid off from a high balance that had a ridiculous limit, so it came along instead. I think the moral of the story is 'be carefully extravagant."
Switch cards! I noticed I had 31% APR on my HSBC credit card--which I've had since my freshman year in college--so I went to my husband's bank, got approved for a Visa Platinum with a non-stupid APR, then transferred my balance over to that account. Now I'm looking forward to the phone call in which I demand HSBC drop my APR back down to non-existent. OR ELSE.
(Though apparently it's unwise to close the account? Because having the same credit card open for decades improves your credit score? Well whatever--I can still keep the account open but threaten to put the card in the cuisinart and never use it again. No interest for you, HSBC! You loan-sharking bastards.)
Yeah, i'm much better at not carrying a balance any more, so I'm thinking of keeping the high-rate amazon card for things I pay off right away (cause free amazon money! And also, I have nothing better that I want rewards for) and getting something different for my daily card uses with a sensible rate (and maybe airline miles). Unfortunately, I now have a chase card with a high rate and a bank of america card with a high rate, and that pretty much limits the low rate cards you can find out there, bastards!
no subject
no subject
Must. Sell. More. Books.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Yay money!
no subject
Sayeth the girl off to rack up MORE student loans. Gah.
no subject
I will NOT be pursuing a PhD.
no subject
no subject
Wait . . .
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
(Though apparently it's unwise to close the account? Because having the same credit card open for decades improves your credit score? Well whatever--I can still keep the account open but threaten to put the card in the cuisinart and never use it again. No interest for you, HSBC! You loan-sharking bastards.)
no subject