Saturday, October 27, 2007

Clean Up Your Bad Credit With Good Credit Repair Info

Most young people are riddled with free Visa and Mastercard accounts when they graduate from high school and move out from under Mom and Dad's roof to face the world on their own. When each of my sons graduated from high school and went to college they were peppered with credit card offers, some granting credit lines of up to $1,200.

Thinking that having their own credit card was some sign of success or free license to buy the electronic wonders and clothes of their dreams, they maxed out their credit limits in no time. All without dear old Dad's knowledge. Thus, began their download spiral in the quicksand pit known as credit card hell.

Being someone from the old school, having grown up poor in the 1950's and 60's, I was taught that good credit was a prized possession you earned and never let go of, even if you went without eating. I witnessed the plight of living a bad credit life first hand, seeing my father have not one, but two new automobiles repossessed when his job played out and he couldn't afford the car payments any longer. Being forced to earn a living and take care of the daily grind and routine of running errands, going to school, etc. without a car was not only difficult, it was embarrassing for me as a kid and very humiliating for my Mom and Dad. I made up my mind then and there that when I grew up I would keep my credit rating impeccable and first rate at all cost.

I've been lucky in life, not having to live long periods of time without a job as my father experienced. I've had a great career and have always been able to meet my credit responsibilities. When my boys were little I oftened worried that when they saw me paying for a nice meal or buying clothes with a credit card, it might not occur to them that despite how simple buying with plastic might appear, it was really being paid for with my hard earned money.

I grew up being taught that it was important for my sister and I to have more than my Mom and Dad. Thus, I raised my sons the same way, frequently buying the latest video games or seeing that they were always dressed in accordance to the latest fashion trends. And despite my efforts to teach them the value of saving money and keeping good credit, both continue to function without a bank account and neither one has the first clue about how to balance a checkbook. I'm told I'm an old fogie and don't understand that young people don't use checkbooks anymore.

In reality the problem is really one of their own. They're too lazy and careless to listen or practice the life one must live to be successful financially. It hurts to see them live the way they do, but unfortunately its a life too many young people are experiencing these days.

And guess what, the big banks that gave them the free credit cards don't even care. They quit hounding them for the money a long time ago. Being concerned about how they were somehow tarnishing my family name by not honoring their debts, I foolishly paid off their balances 3 times -- only to see them request another card and run their debt up again. After 3 times I said "no mas" and quit taking care of their credit responsiblities.

But the big banks and credit card companies that gave them credit without running credit checks, without regard for the fact they had no money or no jobs at the time they gave them credit cards, simply makes up for their losses by charging the good paying clients like you and I higher interest rates. This is why interest rates on credit card debt is so high in America, its built into their marketing system. It's just a numbers game. Give out a 1,000 cards to a 1,000 different young people, knowing that only 10% to 15% will honor their debt but they'll have them on the hook for many years, and make up for their losses on the ones that do hang on by charging high rates.

My advise to young people is that if you're not going to listen to Mom and Dad, at least go to a good credit information site like All-Credit-Info.com and educate yourself about credit and the importance of good credit before you get yourself in debt. And, if you're already in debt and needing to clean up your bad credit, visit these information sites to learn how to clean your credit up without it costing you an arm and a leg.

It never seems to amaze me how we parents never become brilliant in the eyes of our children until they have gone out, tested and failed at everything we've warned them about for years. As a young man once said, "it's amazing how smart my Dad became after I turned 21."

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