A lot of people say a lot of things.
And I am no exception.
Recently there was a New York Times op ed piece about advocating former students to forgo paying their student loans.
As I was pointed to it by my main source of news and information, Yahoo, on the surface, it was a very selfish act that I was intrigued to participate in.
But it was based on an ideal.
If students stopped paying their student loans, the system, univerity and bank, would be forced to change, to reevaluate.
Now, I'm much more selfish than to think about community, and even more so, much more realistic to think such an ideal is plausible. Selfishness and realism, not a great way to spend a life.
But, in my selfishness, and my 100k plus lifestyle, i desire to write to him to gain some knowledge of his lifestyle where one can forget about debts, or attempt to, and move on to giving back to this world in the area one was meant to if it weren't for the financial burden of being slightly lower middle class and having aggregious student loans.
Mr. Lee Siegred,
To think that you received backlash of the extent that you did for your New York Times Op Ed piece is unfortunate. I may have chosen a better, more powerful word there, especially to pen to an author, but I guess the understanding of what it takes to be successful and the barriers of entry are not commonplace in this American society. The "American Dream" as it is, just may be dead, or at least, dying.
Perhaps the backlash is due for our country's populous take on socialism, even though the system appears to embrace it at the lowest income levels, but either way, the backlash received is undeserving, as there is no empathy in media and society, and most certainly not with the advent of the internet.
I, myself, am very empathetic to your situation, but also fringing on a jealousy as I took the road more traveled, the windy, dirty path that is paying my debts monthly, even if they are much greater a percentage of my pay than would be garnished had I chose your approach.
But as much as I will tell my story here, if you make it to that point, a thank you is in order as I, myself, and I would assume anyone with such outrageous debts as ours, am very appreciative of your article. Not that I can be that person, as I have begrudgingly paid the unnecessarily large minimum monthly payments for going on 10 years, but that you have brought hope to hopeless situations. A world where the system is questioned, a world where you are free to pursue your dreams. The American dream. Maybe its heart is still beating somewhere.
The American dream is dead for nonbelievers like myself, but dreamers and doers like you give us hope, hope that is questionable, but hope nonetheless.
I bother you, or I write to you, in the hope of your empathy, but more so, for hopeful guidance for questions that can't be answered by a system, that can't be proposed to my fellow man as us 100k plusers (my wording and phrasing) are few and far between. At least is my feeling that we are few, and I hope for my fellow man that is true, because a crippling debt and a job, more like 2 or 3, that is/are worse is not something I would wish upon my worst enemies.
Enough introductions, I'm not trying to present you a book but a story, a story i pray you may hear, just as your siren song, of which I'm sure as a writer you have many. I do appologize because as you are famous, in your realm, and I am an average, I am not familiar with your works but hope to change that in the future. Anyone advocating for students and common economic decency and not the system is someone I admire greatly. So excuse me, and maybe, possibly, thank you for one more thing, reading to this point.
I myself write and have a passion for it, one I did not fully discover until I was deep enough into my college journey to become an accountant that I couldn't turn my back to as that was the point where the financial crisis I put myself in was becoming more and more a reality. I have a passion maybe, but a passion to debate and fight may not be there, one I'm sure you as a doer and fighter have honed throughout years of writing and fighting the school loans that allowed you to do so.
Anyhow, my story is similar in the fact that I grew up lower middle class; I ended up making more money a year in my first job than my father did a year in any of his positions despite 3 college degrees which most likely connects itself well to this story but I was never aware of the extent of the cost of his education. He was on disability for the last 15 years of his life, while my mother earned a descent living as a nurse, but just the right amount to allow them to earn more than the minimum amount where I would receive much, if any, student aid, and less than would allow them to assist me in the any of the cost to attend a 4 year school.
With that said, I only had a desire to attend one school, Penn State, and that was all I applied for, disregarding any need for scholarships as I was a top 10% of my class kid but not anything other than average. Not being a cheap school was not an issue, or at least I was unaware of that fact, but that decision was made. I was always told by my father, we'd work it out. His intentions were good, but put to play, I was always going to be stuck with a mortgage for a student loan bill. I still, in such an obvious understatement, hold a great deal of animosity about that decision that was made for me, without any research or knowledge of my own. I just knew I was college material, and my father wanted to give me what I wanted, and he thought best. He died several years after I graduated college, several tough years, where just as I am here, put much of the pressure that was on me back on him, mostly in anger. So, suffice to say, it did not work out. I work to support this debt while struggle to support a growing family. Maybe the only true American Dream left.
Back to reality; I knew about 2 years in my debt would surmount to a lot of money, but what was I to do other than treck on. And I have been doing that now for over 10 years, with an acceptance of the fact that I made the incorrect decision with my life and was not from the income bracket that would let me attend such a school, or any school in general as it was all on credit.
That remains my complaint, but I can't do anything about it now.
Until I read your article.
I have about 100k in private loans, which are indespersable, but little government loan assistance due to that long drawn out story of my parents.
I've paid on them for almost 10 years and still have 86k in debt, with minimum payments ranging from $530 to over $900 a month throughout, which I would assume in the 10 years I've paid would have amounted to more than 15k give or take.
But thats not the case.
I now have a masters which I paid about 25k for, a worthless MBA.
My student loan debts, along with my wives, amount to minimum payments that are equal to about 1/5 to 1/6 of our combined monthly income. So at the current moment, with my masters debts in forbearance, I pay an estimated 20% of our monthly net income, when the garnishment of my wages, and I assume just my wages, for the first job, would be the wages targeted.
I don't know if you can confirm or guide me here; my time may be best soent in researching than penning random complaints to a complaining author, but this is more enjoyable and much like therapy.
So, does such an opportunity exist for someone like myself, do the benefits of fighting rather than fighting to get by outweigh the negatives, which in my fear driven and corralled mind, are many?
As I start a family, life, and finances, only get more difficult, as I have a wife, a son, and a house, are there truely benefits to fight the system that will fight me back tenfold?
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