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Eight million people are at risk of losing their homes because Wall Street abandoned responsible lending practices to gain short-term profits. The housing crisis is not just a problem for families facing foreclosure - it's a problem for every homeowner in America. As long as foreclosures persist, home values will keep going down, and everyone loses.

We need your help. Have you been affected by the housing meltdown? Foreclosed on? Underwater? Record your story, or the story of a friend, family member, or neighbor, and send it to us. You can also add your written story along with a photo for the map. Then, watch the video stories of the families, mothers, fathers, and children who have lost, or are losing the place they call home.

Author Archive for admin

Dawn from Utah

My husband and I have been married for over 20 years. We have raised six children and have 12 grand children.

In Feb of 2009 my husband lost his job! We had savings enough to last about six months, and in June 2009 we will not pay our house payment .

This will be the first time we have missed paying our payment on our house we bought four years ago and have never been late on.

My husband is a good and decent man. He has never missed a day’s worth of work in his life, and I mean never - even when sick he went to work. I cannot even begin to tell you how painful this all is. There is no work in five states to be had. My husband worked in the oil and gas sector drilling for natural gas. He is 52 years of age and he and I have been through booms and busts, but this one is the hardest! Maybe because we are older, I don’t know! To make losing our home easier on my husband I told him my happiness is not tied to our home.

We are now moving into a 5th wheel and I am trying real hard to make it like an adventure! But I must admit I am a little scared because we have been turned down for unemployment but will try again later. We are not alone in this. There are so many families in our area suffering. It is sometimes hard to keep from crying for all of us . All I can do is to tell them we are not alone, we are in good company. But that really does not make it any easier, and the feelings of helplessness are so great at times it is hard to bear! I look to the future and realize without a job there is no future for any of us! Without money you are nothing in our society - you are considered worthless. This is the hardest of all to bear; that you can work for 30 years plus and through no fault of your own lose your job. All of a sudden you’re worthless, not trying hard enough, and (the kick in the stomach) you want something for nothing.

It amazes me at times. I must admit that your past 30 plus years means nothing to any one except maybe your children . And as luck would have it, they too are laid off or coming real close to losing there job . Two weeks worth of work and our eldest will be without a job. That leaves only two out of six children with jobs and no guarantees theirs will last the year!!

My four boys are sick with worry. My youngest is the most vocal about it. The other three are very quiet. I say to them all, “we still have air, so we are OK” but they look at me like I am crazy and say “but Mom, how are we going to buy food?” I tell them, “don’t worry, something’s gotta give.” But it’s only getting worse. Four out of six of my children have lost their homes and now us, the parents, are losing ours! My husband’s three brothers are all out of work, so no help there!

My own bother is out of work also. He needs surgery and can not afford it. He has two beautiful daughters and his wife who depends on him. If it was just us out of work it would not be so bad, but almost every family member is out of work
and we can no longer help them because we are now out of work! In the last year we have given over 15,000 dollars to family members to help save their homes, and we don’t know if it will do any good at all. What’s it like to be homeless in America? Well, I am about to find out!! Good luck to us all, for we are going need it.

Jeannie from Connecticut

I was served a notice of eviction from my home by Connecticut Marshal DeLucia on Friday May 15, 2009. I bought the home located at 23 Ridge Road Newtown , CT 06470 on June 30, 2001 and have lived there with my four children ages 13-17 since June 30, 2001. We still reside in the home and hope to stay there for many years to come.

Only one week prior to being served the aforementioned eviction papers, I received a phone call from a local friend informing me that she had see my name and address on a list of homeowners/homes that had been foreclosed upon by their lenders and were subsequently owned by those banks. Since I am a verbal, proactive individual, my friend was shocked that I had not told her about this compelling misfortune and subsequently rendered speechless (not an easily provoked state in this individual) when I responded that I had no idea that the foreclosure or bank sale had occurred. Following our brief conversation, I held back tears and panic just long enough to contact an attorney. After investigating the matter, Attorney William Carter of Meriden, Ct. confirmed that my home was in fact bank owned. He said that he would do whatever he could to help but in all likelihood my response in the matter was far too late to reverse the sale and regain title to my home.

Summarily, in July, 2008, I enlisted the help of a company, America Modification Agency (AMA) (http://www.yourama.com) to negotiate a modification of my mortgage. Job instability and a large monthly payment resulting from an inflated home appraisal preceding a mortgage refinance precipitated my need for mortgage assistance and an investigation of my options. Since my mortgage crisis preceded public awareness of the subprime mortgage debacle there was scant information about avenues or agencies to assist homeowners yet I did find AMA through an internet search engine. Based on their self reported track record and alleged success negotiating principal and interest reductions in cases supposedly similar to mine coupled with a lack of negative or scam reports about them, following three phone conversations with agency representatives and one with a client they said they helped, I signed a service contract. AMA agreed to negotiate with my lender (Litton Loan Services acting on behalf of Deutsche Bank) for a principal and interest reduction and were confident they could help. When I signed the contract with AMA in July 2008, I was still current on my mortgage payments and recently learned that because of my current status, I was NOT eligible for a loan modification at all. Thus, I was not eligible for AMA’s services nor was I entitled to any of their promises.

Immediately after signing the contract, I told AMA that I could not manage the $5,000 payment to them as I was barely able to meet my mortgage and asked for a payment schedule. AMA said they needed the entire amount up front before they could negotiate on my behalf and that time was of the essence. Then they verbally instructed me to stop making mortgage payments and assured me this was “safe” since they expected to have matters settled within 60 days. They also instructed me to send ALL correspondence from the lender directly to them (AMA) and not to read it. Their rationale was based on their experience that “mortgage companies typically use scare tactics that they have no intention of enforcing.” Further they told me not to communicate with the lender or anyone linked to them either verbally or in writing. Finally AMA assured me that my money would be refunded in full if a satisfactory loan modification did not result from their efforts.

In hindsight, I was a fool to believe, hire, pay and follow the advice and instructions of AMA. I was however desperate and overwhelmed with the responsibility of full time work, sole support of 4 children, a history of exploitation by others in my childhood years and a need for support and reassurance. AMA, just like the lenders and banks and corporations responsible for our nation’s current economic crises prey on people like me, the only difference is that I thought I was immune to their exploitation and I like millions of others I was not.

It turns out that I did not receive a successful loan modification, I was viewed as negligent by my lender for not responding to their letters; for not attending scheduled court dates. I spoke with AMA almost daily for weeks at a time especially when a court date was upcoming. They lied shamelessly, telling me with kindness in their lying voices that their lawyers were in attendance at court hearings on my behalf and that everything would be OK. I did not receive a refund, phone calls were no longer returned. AMA just made matters worse as they added at least $50,000 in principal, interest and legal fees to my already over-inflated mortgage. At the time I contracted with AMA my upside down mortgage reflected a home valued at $350,000 against a mortgage of $501,000.
Despite being a respected professional and member of my community with a PhD and years of education from ivy league schools I complied with AMA’s instructions because I was in dire straits and was desperate to save my home. I am a single parent with 4 children aged 13-17 and have received no child support for over 10 years. I have been a responsible homeowner in Newtown CT since 1997 when I moved from Philadelphia to assume a position at Yale University as an Associate Professor. Over the course of those 10 plus years, I was only late on one mortgage payment until July, 2008 when I signed up for AMA’s help. To date my children have no idea that we may soon be forced to leave our home and I assure you this will be quite traumatic for them as we have experienced significant hardship over the last several years. Within the context of the mental health services that I have provided to the citizens of Connecticut, the United States and beyond, I find it appalling that I am unable to find help for myself and my family at this time. This is especially disturbing since a series of events, largely precipitated by the greed of banks and insurance companies have put me and my family in our position of financial hardship in the first place.

I was on the faculty of Yale University (1997-2004) and the University of CT from 2005-2007. In 2007, due to family illness and my children’s need to have me closer to home, I started a full time private practice based on my background as a PhD prepared psychologist and nurse practitioner. Currently I am the owner and sole proprietor of Integrated Mental Health Services LLC. (see www.health-e-writer.com or psychologytoday.com find a therapist (zip 06482) for details regarding my professional credentials and accomplishments).

Based on 2 years of underemployment resulting from family illness and the lag time involved in transitioning from a 6 hr per week private practice to a full time caseload coupled with unreliable payment by managed care companies for services rendered and an alleged misunderstanding between myself and the University of CT regarding a severance package that did not materialize as promised, I was forced to live off of multiple home refinances for almost 3 years. In or around 2004, I actually owned my home outright and now find myself on the brink of homelessness for reasons that seem outrageously unfair, unethical and everything in between.

I am frantic for help and have not been able to access any. It seems wrong that circumstances should force me and my children out of our family home when I have spent my life helping others in need. Again, please help me or direct me to where I may obtain help. Although my private practice is growing rapidly and is very successful in terms of number of patients treated who experience positive health outcomes, I have been unable to meet my expanding caseload with needed infrastructure and resources for expansion. Medicare and other managed care companies have grown increasingly slow and unreliable with regard to making timely reimbursements for services rendered to their insured especially where mental health services are concerned.

Numerous conversations with colleagues have confirmed this escalating and disturbing trend which most of my peers have handled by refusing to participate as managed care providers and working exclusively on a cash basis. I have and continue to avoid that path as it represents the antithesis to strongly held values that mental health services should be available and accessible to all Americans, not just a privileged few. The preceding scenario has essentially created a situation whereby my private practice has and continues to grow exponentially; thus I am working well in excess of “full time” yet I am making an income that is not even comparable to minimum wage. I cap my caseload at 50 and have an ongoing and expanding waiting list. I am viewed b the local citizenry as competent, and compassionate; I can prescribe medication, have extensive training in psychotherapy especially with regard to treating depression am adept at treating patients with simultaneously occurring medical and psychiatric illnesses including the elderly and accept adolescent patients with behavioral, conduct and attention problems.

Paradoxically, despite the fact that I am one of the only area providers who accepts insurance, managed care companies have all but stopped paying me. This includes medicare and all other major health insurance providers. Never the less, I continue to work 6 days per week for at least 10-12 hours per day, somehow remaining optimistic that I will recoup my income which basically consists of small patient co-pays ranging from $5.00-$40.00 and occasional reimbursement checks from managed care plans.

Complicating matters further, in July of this past summer, I was hit from behind by a drunk driver going 80plus mph. My car has not been operable since and to date I have only recouped partial repair costs and my 500.00 deductible. Neither my insurance carrier, (Nationwide), nor the drunk driver’s carrier, (Commerce) even covered the total cost of replacement vehicle rental while my care was being repaired. When I finally got my car back, it was inoperable within days of being back on the road and as has been my consistent experience in all insurance matters, the insurance company denies responsibility when they clearly are responsible. As in the matter with my home, the time I have available to pursue legal action is quite limited. I am working long hours to support my family, barely making ends meet and have little time other than the middle of the night to address time consuming legal issues.
I am appealing to politicians, television stations, newspapers, listserves and friends to help me save my home and to expose the agencies, banks, corporations, insurance carriers and all others who exploit others in the name of our great nation. I have followed your work and admire your service as an advocate for the citizens of CT. Please, please extend your hand to me. I promise to return the favor many times over by continuing to serve others in need including those who can pay and those less fortunate who cannot.

Alicen from California

I refinanced my home mortgage three years ago from a fixed rate to an adjustable rate. One that defers interest each month, causing the balance to increase. This loan was clearly a mistake, as it ate away at my equity. That was before the housing crash. Now, my loan balance exceeds my appraised value by over one hundred thousand dollars. So, I am “under water.”

In October, 2008, my boyfriend moved out suddenly. I was left to make the mortgage payments on my own. At the same time, I had a decrease in work hours due to the poor economy. At the end of 2008, I fell behind in my payments.

Later, when I attempted to catch up, the bank wouldn’t work with me. They told me that I had to pay all past-due payments. They wouldn’t accept a single payment. In fact, they told me that it would be returned if I were to mail it. Consequently, I became further behind and still not able to catch up with past due payments plus new ones added.

In March, the bank announced they had a loan modification program called MAP. I faxed in all the information required and awaited the outcome.

At the beginning of April, I received a letter stating a short-sale request was being processed and I had seven days to respond. Otherwise, my file would be closed. By the time I received the letter, the seven days had passed. Since it was the weekend, I faxed a letter immediately to the bank asking them for the status of my loan modification. I explained that I had never requested a short sale.

Presently, I’m waiting for a reply and I’m quite fearful of the outcome.

I am worried that the bank is in the process of filing default. I don’t know where I’d live if I had to move suddenly. I’ve lived in the same house for 36 years. It’s an emotional issue as well as a financial one. I do wish there was a way that I could stay in my home while seeking a solution to my mortgage crisis.

I do believe that banks should do more to help homeowners rather than seek foreclosure. If banks can ask for bailouts, then why can’t homeowners get assistance as well? And shouldn’t government funding go directly to agencies that can assist the homeowner in trouble? I have contacted Hope for Homeowners and other government agencies. The experience was time-consuming and I did not find these agencies to be effective in saving my home.

I’ve contacted numerous companies who say they can save my homes for a large up-front fee. Since there are so many companies who are trying to scam homeowners, one does not know who to trust. I have come to the conclusion that I will need a company with lawyers on staff. Yet, there is still no guarantee and in many instances, fees are not refundable.

And what about filing chapter 13? Is a bankruptcy better than a foreclosure? This is also costly, I’m told.

And perhaps I should save my money to relocate if forced to leave. I have spent many sleepless nights searching for an answer.

Michael from Massachusetts

The Other Victims of the Mortgage Meltdown

My name is Michael Jayne and I am a 100% non-service connected disabled veteran. When my son Max graduated from high school last year with decent grades, his hope at the time was to work and earn enough to go to the Stillpoint School of Massage Therapy, a nationally recognized program offered at Greenfield Community College. As soon as he graduated he got a job in construction doing roofing. Since he was very physically strong, intelligent, and a quick learner, he worked his way up to $15/hour within two months of starting.

It looked like his plan would work until the real estate bubble popped and housing construction as an industry ceased to exist. He now is competing with every other unemployed 19 year-old chasing after minimum wage jobs that, if found, are not quite enough to survive on, never mind saving up for school. His situation has deteriorated to the point that all of his savings are gone and he had to move in with me.

This is a huge risk for the both of us because I live in a subsidized 1-bedroom apartment and I cannot legally add him to my lease. If I lose my non-transferable Section-8, we both become homeless without options. My son might be able to couch-surf for a while but with my disabilities (lower back spinal cord injury, six 3″ screws hold my back together) the thought of homelessness scares the hell out of me. Since he hasn’t been able to find work, the two of us have been trying to live on the $985 a month that I get from the VA. We are NOT making it. I am at risk of having my electricity cut off at any time (I still owe over $300) and I expect to lose my phone in less than a week. It is a struggle to even make the co-payments for my medications. If it weren’t for food from various charities, we would be genuinely hungry.

These BANDITS that already live in the lap of luxury apparently felt that they either needed or deserved MORE. They got it by de-regulation of mortgage-based securities that enabled them to go on the kind of speculation investment binge that brought us the Savings & Loan Disaster (another taxpayer bailout) and prior to that the Great Stock Market Crash of Oct. 1929. This time, unlike 1929, instead of jumping out of windows, these money mis-managers asked for and got a huge taxpayer funded bailout with almost no strings attached. A significant part of this money they promptly used to reward themselves with huge bonuses in recognition of saving their shareholder’s hides at the expense of EVERYBODY ELSE.

Did they use ANY of that money to help homeowners by re-negotiating their mortgages to an affordable fixed rate? No Way! Houses that already had construction started on them found that the building loan money had dried up and blown away making the term “construction worker” synonymous with “unemployed” here in Massachusetts.

As a registered Republican for the last thirty years, I have been made a fool of. In the last 8 years the wealthiest top 10% of US citizens enjoyed a huge MULTIPLICATION of their wealth while the middle class was looted of its jobs, retirements, and homes. Welfare to the Wall Street Fat Cats in the form of taxpayer-funded bailouts is OK by this new kind of Republican Party. However helping out people who go to work each day (if they still have a job), pay their bills (unless….), and have played by the rules of the American Dream seem to be at the bottom of the GOP’s priority list.

More than anything else, I am disappointed that I would be forced to choose between the “Tax & Spend” party or the “Borrow & Spend” party.

Lauralyn from California

My husband and I sold our New York apartment to move to California in 2005, which I did both for health and professional reasons. I opened a healing studio and over the years have helped thousands of people. My husband found a job at Bank of America.

When he got this job his boss called him her “token white boy.” She promised him a raise and great future at the bank.

We were outgrowing our rented apartment and longed to own a home again like we did in New York. It was the height of the real estate market but we believed since my business was going well and he had great promises at the bank, we could do it.

Not long after we bought our home, the health food store where I had my healing practice went bankrupt. The only space I could find at the time had very high overhead, but I felt I had no choice - it was either that, or lose my business entirely. My profits were quickly eaten up by this new rental space.

At the bank, the promises of my husband rising up in the ranks didn’t happen. In fact, he started hearing threats of Bank of America laying people off. We were devastated and felt so lied to. Bank of America gave us the mortgage and Home Equity Loan for our home knowing our financial situation, and his manager knew we were relying on his advancement at the bank to afford our house. Amazing how she gave us the loans and didn’t keep her word.

I worked my butt off to try to make enough profit to contribute to my home, but with my husband out of work realized I couldn’t afford both my home and office. If I left my office, my practice would be over. I felt in a catch-22.

My husband, realizing the bank wasn’t going to promote him any time soon and us falling behind in our payments, started looking for another job. It took him a while and with his BA in business he ended up working for minimum wage at a hardware store for months. We fell further behind. The financial stress led us to file for divorce. He moved out and I had no way to support my home.

I ended up having to break the lease on my office and my practice fell apart. I went from making $7,000 a month to less than $1,000. It’s been 6 months and I’m still in shock how everything was going so well and fell apart so quickly.

My husband ended up finally getting a better paying job and we immediately called the bank to modify our loans. After a rep at Bank of America told us the great news that our payments would be lowered substantially, we had hoped we could keep our home!

After being approved on the phone, weeks later we received a rejection letter from the bank in the mail. I don’t understand this company. There is no word, no trust, no ethics.

I have been trying to re-build my business from home, and now I’ve been living every day wondering when will I receive notice that I have to move. Where will I go? The stress has made me physically ill, and I don’t have health insurance so I feel stuck. The financial stress is overwhelming, I can’t sleep or eat. I’m exhausted all the time and my stomach is a mess.

The loss of my practice has been incredibly painful not just for me but for the community that was receiving help. All I could think is if they just modified our loans, we could make it here. My husband would move back in and it would not only save our home, but help heal our marriage.

We would have never bought this house in the first place if we had any idea that he wasn’t going to be promoted as promised.

Generations of my family fought and died for this country.

I almost died at 21 years old in this country because I was ill, broke and uninsured.

Now my house is being threatened with foreclosure because a promise from a bank turned out to be a lie.

This is not my country. They ask us to be patriotic and boast about unity - what unity is this? How can this country ask us to be proud and loyal when God forbid if you get sick and are struggling this country will abandon you?

I used to have dreams but now I believe only the rich, greedy, and conniving survive in America.

I am now dreaming of the opportunity to move to Europe where it’s citizens are treated like human beings instead of commodities whose value is determined not through common decency but through “what can you do for me” capitalism.

America’s motto should be, “Give us all you’ve got and we’ll take it.”

Sincerely,

Lauralyn

Thomas from California

A couple of years ago, a roommate and I found an ad on Craigslist for a 3 bedroom townhouse at $1,500 a month. It seemed too good to be true - it was too good to be true.

The landlords took our rent and deposit and we paid a few more months of rent. We found out that the house was going into foreclosure, and that we would be getting our deposit back from the rental company.

We didn’t end up getting our deposit back, so we squatted in the house for 8 months as the banks kept telling us to leave. 6 or 7 months into the squatting, the banks had people watching us. A sub-contracting company even changed the locks on us and stole about $800 worth of things.

It’s an awful feeling to know that other people have control over where you live and the stuff you have. It’s an awful feeling to come home and fear that all of your possessions are on the street.

Eventually we were able to settle with the bank, but until then we felt very uncomfortable negotiating with the bank. It was just a scary experience - and it wasn’t like we wanted that. We were just looking for a place to live, a place to pay rent for. Eventually we got a bit of money to settle with the banks to help us move out, but until then it was definitely not pleasant.

There was a couple across the street that had rented from the same rental company, and they left way earlier than we did because they didn’t want their child to be affected by the same scare tactics.

Christine from Arizona

Help us so that we can help ourselves. We came within inches of losing our home. I have been out of work since November, 2007. Our finances became impossible to keep up with. We even lost a vehicle. We are among the fortunate ones who were eligible for loan modification, but there are many others who haven’t been so fortunate. We need your help to increase the number of people who will be able to keep their homes and their dignity. Thank you for reading my letter.

Kurt from Tennessee

On the other hand, many residents here have been forced to move (evicted) simply because they have lost their jobs. I am one of these people. I was forced to move in March 2008 because I lost my job and could not pay my rent. I moved into a place that unbeknown to me had been foreclosed upon by its absentee owner. Me and three other families were forced to move because the bank wanted to take possession and tear the building down rather than make expensive repairs to bring the building up to code. The bank wanted to “complete” or keep positive its investment profile.

I have not been able to find a job for some time. I have simply had fewer responses and fewer call backs for interviews. Now Tanglewood wants to evict me. I have since filed Chapter 13 Bankruptcy to forestall this action. No mention or notice is paid to this epidemic problem by politicians or civic leaders. I simply want a job so I can pay my bills, get off of Unemployment and Food Stamps, and so I can hold my head high again instead of hang it in shame everywhere I go. Is that so wrong? Attention needs to be paid to us renters as well, and something needs to be done to assist us as well. We need some time to regain our feet as well as home owners do. America, Americans, and politicians need to stop ignoring renters. We are your friends and neighbors too.

Rebecca from Georgia

Because I lived in Europe for 20+ years, I had no credit history when I went to purchase a condo in the US after my husband’s death. A lender gave me a 3 year, no doc, balloon payment loan. I should have known better, but…

For most of the 3 years, payments were made out of a CD until suddenly the bank ceased that practice, took me to court for the entire face value of the loan and locked me out of the CD.

I am extraordinarily lucky in that I have the financial and emotional resources to hire an attorney, fight the bank and (hopefully) ultimately obtain a mortgage on more favorable terms.

During the 3 years I had this unusual mortgage, I repeatedly requested that it be converted to a more conventional loan, only to have new hurdles put in my path each time, and I never was able to reorganize the loan. It wasn’t until the financial crisis broke with the banking institutions that they took steps to call in the loan and, in effect, attempt to make me homeless.

With hindsight I now know I should never have entered into such an arrangement, but in my defense, I was in a vulnerable state because of my husband’s sudden death. To a certain extent the bank took advantage of that fact.

If they were willing to do that to me, a mature white woman with the resources to fight back, I hate to think what they were capable of regarding more vulnerable borrowers.

At this point, there have been so many foreclosures and short sales in this one development alone, we as one small community are already seeing the affects of the decline in general property values as mentioned in your letter to our politicians.

I have no idea how this will all play out for me - but feel I have a responsibility to try to make a difference for others that do not have the same resources and advantages.

Terry from Utah

In 2006 I was in a car accident with my fiance two months before our wedding. We were building a spec. home and planning to sell it to pay off our small house I had owned for 10 years. I was a single mother, a real estate broker for over 13 years, with little debt (under $200,000). I represented a $20,000,000 project of non-conforming condos and was in line for over 1 million dollars in commission in the course of the following year. I had $80,000 in commission in line for the Summer and early Fall 2007. It all fell apart around that time.

We spent every dollar we made in the spec. home, about $150,000. I designed the house and my husband handled the subcontractors. We paid insane fees for a one time construction to permanent financing. By the time the bubble hit we were told the bank that was going to provide permanent financing was not going to offer any more permanent financing. Also, if we didn’t live in it we would have to pay a non-owner occupant fee of $20,000. Magnet Bank was our lender and they filed bankruptcy less than two months after our closing. Our house closed without being 100% complete. We still have rock and paint that needs to be addressed. As well as the fence, landscaping, etc. So we had two weeks to find permanent financing. We then paid high closing costs again. Then we tried to sell our small home we lived in prior to the spec. home and couldn’t sell it. We were trying to keep our excellent credit and pay off our creditors. But this was a luxury spec. home. We couldn’t sell the spec. because it wasn’t complete. My business dried up for over a year. I earned $180,000 in 2007 and less than $30,000 for 2008. Both my homes are in foreclosure. I rarely see a paycheck. I am filing for foreclosure in two weeks and my new husband and I are trying to figure out where to go from here. He’s trying to find work and we are both hoping to hang on and deal with the bills and lack of options for jobs. We are both in need of furthering our educations and would like to focus on the eco-friendly environmental consultant in order to have more career options. But I am getting many referrals from past clients and I am seeing more activity again. Cross your fingers for me!

I would love to be able to keep my home and pay my bills off. But my business is just starting to slowly see movement. I am in debt over $1,400,000. My properties are worth $760,000. I owe over $1,200,000 on both properties.

I hope this letter helps.