Money Debt & Credit In The Media
Woman's Own Magazine, 'I hid £30,000 debt from my husband,' September 4, 2006
When Roz Cross, 49, from Hertfordshire, helped out her student daughters, she had no idea where it would lead.
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Woman's Own Magazine'I hid £30,000 debt from my husband' |
The cash machine spat out my bank card, and my heart sank. My husband Rob, stood a short distance away, oblivious to my predicament.
'I think the machine's broken. Can you buy this week's shopping?' I shouted over. I hated lying, but I didn't dare to tell Rob, 55, the truth. We've always kept our money separate throughout 28-year marriage.
My financial problems started in 1999, when our eldest daughter, Amy, now 25, went to university. Although she received a grant, I still sent her money - or 'Red Cross parcels', as she called them! By the end of her first year, I'd given her £4,000. I knew that Rob would have made Amy get a part-time job if he'd known, but I wanted her to concentrate on her studies.
When Lynsey, now 23, went to university in 2001, my problems doubled. I was giving my daughters £600 a month - half my salary. Within two years, I was £2,000 overdrawn and owed £8,000 on five credit cards. I took out a high-interest loan to cover the debts.
When Amy graduated in 2002, she could only get a part-time job, so I still gave her money. Then in October 2003, I fractured my spine and was signed off work, only getting £12.50 a day statutory sick pay. By this time, I couldn't even afford the minimum payments on the credit cards - which amounted to £1,200 a month.
I was getting seven or eight phone calls a day from creditors, so I unplugged the phone and threw away the bills without opening them.
When a friend committed suicide a year ago, I finally took my head out of the sand. She was only 23, and had left a note to say she couldn't cope with the debt she'd built up.
I thought I owed around £15,000, but when I rang a debt agency, I was told the figure was £30,000.
In shock, I considered taking an overdose, but realised I couldn't do such a thing to my family. I knew I had to own up, so one night in January over dinner, I blurted out the words, 'I've got problems with debt'.
Rob and the girls looked at me in silence. When I told them how much I owed, Rob was furious at first, but then he gave me a big hug. 'Why didn't you say anything?' he said. 'I've been worried sick wondering why you were so down all the time.'
I found a company called Money, Debit & Credit, which set up an Individual Voluntary Agreement (IVA) for me. It's a legal agreement whereby your creditors agree to write off some of your debt, as long as you pay back what you can afford. Since the New Year, I've been paying £250 a month.
Rob and I are more open with one another now, and the girls are working. These days it's Lynsey who lends me cash!




