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45K in debt

181 replies

UsedToLoveMorrissey · 27/04/2018 13:47

Hello, i think i just need to get this off my chest.

We are £45k in debt. All unsecured, and no access to anymore credit and all in husband's name.

I don't work. I used to do well on-line and at craft fairs but that has taken a huge hit and I don't do fairs anymore as they are not worth it now where we live. I am learning to drive so I can get a job within school hours (we live in the middle of nowhere, 5 buses a day, if they bother to show up and times don't suit to get back for DS).

DH has a good job, but we live in Scotland and I think the rate has changed or the pension contributions have because DH is less £70 a month now. I cried when I saw this this morning.

We can make the payments but any spending above our food/petrol/school lunches etc and we end up in our overdraft so by christmas, we are £2k down. My craft sales at xmas pay this off thankfully, and pays for presents but the rest of the year is rubbish. I sell on Etsy so I dont have a website to upkeep, just the cost of listing each item and a small % in commission.

DS has a good job, but with less than £3k a month coming in, and £900 of to go purely on CC and Loans repayments, excluding mortgage and car (which DH needs because of where we live) we are struggling. Our food bill is approx £100 per month. That includes 1 bottle of wine. No smokes. I have coeliac disease so my bread is a bit dearer, but that's only one loaf a week. One pack of GF biscuits, no other biscuits and very little crap.

I'm not a good cook, we eat basic meals that I do cook from scratch. We eat meat once a week (either chicken or mince beef), we eat mostly salads with tuna/roasted veg and rice/baked pots/soups. We don't eat takeways (we live too far our for delivery). I get the shopping delivered from Asda as that works out at about 40p per week with the mid week saver. We go through about 20 eggs a week (DS and DH love them). Sliced Egg on toast is a favourite weekend lunch.

We eat a lot of fruit, which we do buy from M&S as that is so nice. I have found the delivered fruit to be poor quaility.

If I really try, I am sure we could shave about £10 of the shopping. But really, I cant see anywhere else to make the saving.

The issue somes to this: because we are making the payments, we've not missed one, the Debt website Step Change, are recommending a cut in spending accross the board but no debt advice as such because we can repay.

Also, DH has a job which he would lose if he was made bankrupt. We'd love the debt to be paid off, but we have no extra income, and we'd be out on the streets if were chose a debt soloution as we have no savings to get us through DS losing his job.

I'm prepared to accept the advice that we simply have to accept the situation, we can pay the debt, we have a house and food, but we have nothing else. Any clothes, hair cuts, days out takes us further in debt. It's getting us down and we are snipping at each other too. I'm probably about 6mth away from passing my driving test, and will be reliant on getting a part time job to help out. Until then, I'll keep doing surveys. Being a lurker on here, I have recently changed the CC repayments to a set amount, so that should reduce the balance so much quicker. Thank you t the poster who mentioned this trick.

Sorry for the moan. I know we are to a certain extent luckier than so many people but for 2 very unflashy, unshowy people, we sure have wracked up too much debt through poor choices years ago.

OP posts:
TeisanLap · 30/04/2018 10:22

Good luck OP, with your attitude to getting everything sorted it won’t be too long before you feel you can breath again. Flowers

Snog · 30/04/2018 11:15

Why not do one of those new driver to pass your test in 6 days intensive driving courses as if you can get Work 6 months earlier by doing this it would surely be worth it

missmouse101 · 30/04/2018 11:36

We are a family of 4 who live in rural Wales. Money is always extremely tight and we have an Asda delivery too. I would definitely order fruit and veg from there as you know they are WAY cheaper than M+S. If anything is substandard (ie mouldy satsuma, squashed strawberries, bruised apples) it is simplicity itself to get a refund! I have NEVER had a problem with ringing customer services or requesting a refund online for these items. You will be fully reimbursed, plus you get to keep the item, so can still make good use of it.

I have no nonsense from them. If I receive, for example, fish pie mix with 1 day only on the use by date, I ring up straight away or request a refund online. They are always brilliant, no questions asked, refund received and you'll have a fish pie for supper that night for nothing. I never do this fraudulently, but for substandard/short dated items, there's no question.

UsedToLoveMorrissey · 30/04/2018 13:07

Thanks everyone, today and yesterday I had no stress headaches - can't be a bad thing Smile

We had issues before with Tesco and Sainsburys with their bananas - greener than green and even putting them in a drawer didn't ripen them after a week or so. But I've added them for this weeks shop to see. I'm more than sure they will be fine. LIke you missmouse I've had food from Asda that has had the same expiry date as delivery date, cant be frozen and was intended for use later. Ive simply gone on line and had a refund no questions asked. Im sure if I did it all the time they would question it but now and again, when genuine, the refunds have all gone through.

I've never thought about an intensive course, but I don't think we could find cash upfront for it. a lesson a week is fairy costly for us. The cost of insuring the car for me to learn in right now is about £150 until December (i'l too old apparently for specific learner drivier insurance, it had to be as an addition driver thingy). DH really really not keen or confident about being in the car with me and no dual conotrols and says that £150 would be better spent on proper lessons. I cant argue with him, if he's not confident, I can't force him. However, I have looked up dual control hire cars and as long as we can find someone to watch DS, we can hire a car for much cheaper than a lesson. I'll see what DH says later.

OP posts:
DairyisClosed · 30/04/2018 13:15

I would suggest getting chickens and growing your own food. It will cost a bit at the c list but will save you money in the long run. A lot of food can be grown from scraps (E. G. Keep the root section of celery /fennel then stick in water until new roots emerge). Plant some off onions for sring onions. Scope the seeds out of tomatoes to grow tomatoe plants. Plant a strawberry for a strawberry plant and so on. Making your own bread can also save money.

UsedToLoveMorrissey · 30/04/2018 16:18

Not so sure about keeping chickens - seen a few foxes in the field out the back (or one several times Grin) and celery is the work of the devil but I love spring onions and tomatoes! Can they be grown inside on the windowsill? I get bread flour on prescription so I sometimes make that. Might just need to make it more often.

OP posts:
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