Student loan horror stories:
What's the worst that can happen?
With $830 billion in student loans
outstanding in America, mounting student loan debt is increasingly wreaking
havoc on the lives of U.S. college graduates and dropouts alike.
As unemployment remains
stubbornly high, delinquencies and default
rates are rising as indebted borrowers struggle to repay hefty student
loans that often reach six-figures.
Unfortunately, college debt
isn't just taking a financial toll on millions of borrowers. It's also
inflicting staggering costs on the health, careers, emotional well-being and
personal relationships of those burdened with big college loans.
At StudentLoanJustice.org, where people
share their stories about living with college debt, one person talks about
suffering a mild heart attack, while another laments having panic attacks –
both due to the stress of student loans. Others admit having sleepless nights,
migraines and even thoughts of suicide.
In fact, in a poll
currently running on ForgiveStudentLoanDebt.com,
8% of those surveyed said they would be willing to commit suicide "as an
aggressive form of protest" in order to be heard by Congress about their
student loan plight.
So if you think the worst that
can happen with hefty student loans or unpaid college debt is money problems
and bad credit, think again.
It can actually get worse.
Much worse.
A Ruined Relationship
One woman, who asked that her
name not be used because of the sensitive nature of her job, is working abroad
after getting her bachelor's degree from the University of Washington in
Seattle and her PhD from the University of London. She says student loans have
helped her achieve various academic and professional goals. Those same loans,
however, helped ruin a cherished relationship, too.
The 33-year-old woman last
month endured a painful breakup with her boyfriend of seven years. "Much
of it was to do to the fact that I have over $150,000 in student loan debt and
he did not want to be responsible, or help me, pay it back," she told
WalletPop. "He wanted other things, such as a house and kids, and that is
simply not an option for me as I have this mountain of debt to pay back."
She is currently finishing her
clinical residency as a psychologist. "The pay is not great, and two of my
loans are in temporary hardship forbearance."
Of her breakup, she says,
"I do understand where he's coming from." Nevertheless, she said the
whole situation is still "so sad."
Family Tensions Boil Over
When 31-year-old Jessica
Tisdale* fell in love with someone who had gigantic student loans, her
relatives all advised her not to get married. "My whole family was against
me marrying my husband because he has approximately $300,000 in student loan
debt," says Tisdale, who lives in New York. But against her family's
wishes, she went through with the wedding anyway.
Her 34-year-old husband
attended medical school, but he couldn't complete his last year because he ran
out of student loans in 2008 and had no other way to pay for tuition.
Since then, he's been unable
to finish his studies or, despite his best efforts, find full-time work. Now
Tisdale's husband is undergoing training to sell insurance. Adding to their
stress, the couple – who just got married last year – has had to move in with
her mother.
"It's really embarrassing
to be over 30 and still living with your mom," Tisdale says. "Plus,
my mom frequently yells about what a deadbeat [my husband] is and how stupid I
was to marry him, so that causes a lot of tension in the household."
Asked whether she regrets her
decision to marry someone with so many student loans, Tisdale says no. She
notes that she has big student loans of her own -- roughly $163,000, after
earning a bachelor's degree from Columbia University and a master's degree in
linguistics from New York University.
Tisdale is currently holding
down three part-time jobs to make her $750 a month student loan payments. Next
spring, her payments will rise to $1,050 monthly. Meanwhile, a few of her
husband's loans have slipped into default.
Career Dreams Dashed
In addition to seriously
damaging your credit rating, student loan defaults
also carry severe career consequences. Under the law, professionals with any
kind of state license – doctors, lawyers, accountants and so on – can all have
their professional licenses revoked if they default on federal student loans.
Such defaults are particularly
troublesome for health-care workers because borrowers in default also get
excluded from the Medicare and Medicaid programs by the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. For existing doctors and health-care providers,
they'd be unable to accept Medicare payments, which is critical for hospitals,
clinics, physicians and others.
Moreover, for medical
professionals, a federal student loan default "effectively eliminates 98%
of your employment opportunities," says Michael Smith, an
attorney with The Health Law Firm,
an Altamonte Springs, Fla.-based company that provides legal services to the
health-care industry.
"If you're excluded from
the Medicare program, no other provider that takes Medicare can contract with
you in any form," Smith told WalletPop. "I tell my clients, 'You
can't even cut the grass at a hospital, or they will lose their Medicare
(status).' "
Because he hasn't finished
school and due to his student loan defaults, Tisdale says her husband realizes
that his dreams of becoming a pediatric surgeon have been dashed. So, according
to Tisdale, her husband is "turning his attention to the things he can
control. He's disappointed. But he's a realist."
As if the loss of career
options wasn't bad enough, Tisdale and her husband lament that their student
loan debt has even forced the couple to put on hold another big goal: having
kids together.
They also worry about the
impact of their loans on their immediate family members. "His sister
co-signed on his loans, so he's trying not to drag her down," Tisdale
says. "Same for me: My mom co-signed my loans, and if I go down, she's
going to go down with me, and I don't want that."
Although the financial stress
of having big student loans is tough, Tisdale says, "We can be
sympathetic, and we end up being an emotional support for each other, because
we're in the same boat."
A Life on the Run
Matthew Bridges* is a
65-year-old college professor who teaches science classes online. He's also, in
his words, "a fugitive" because an insurmountable level of student
loan debt has upended his entire world.
By his creditors' last tally,
Bridges owes a jaw-dropping $1.75 million in student loans. To escape
unrelenting harassment from debt collectors, Bridges fled the country in 2006
to live and work in the Philippines.
Bridges spoke to WalletPop
recently during a brief visit back to the U.S., where he shared his story and
explained why he took the drastic step of leaving his homeland. For starters,
his college debt load wasn't always so staggering.
Bridges first earned a science
degree in 1984 and later obtained a PhD. in 1996 from a for-profit college in
Texas. By the time he finished his doctorate, Bridges owed $104,000 in student
loans.
Over the course of more than
25 years, however, interest on all his loans has compounded, and late fees plus
penalties have been tacked on to what he owed. Some interest rates were as high
as 29.99%, and collection charges of roughly 25% have been added to his debt,
he says. "I'll never be able to earn my way out of this problem,"
says Bridges.
Because he is dyslexic and
suffered various physical ailments, Bridges endured long bouts of unemployment
throughout his career. At one point in his earlier years, "I was eating
out of a dumpster," he recalls.
Later, when he earned his PhD
at age 51, his employment prospects still didn't improve much. "No
university wanted to hire anyone 51," he says. "They wanted to hire
people who were 30."
It's only been in the past
seven years, after being diagnosed as a lifelong dyslexic and getting
medication from a Veterans Administration hospital, that he's been able to work
steadily. He says his income has ranged from $20,000 to $50,000 annually, with
2009 being his "best year ever."
Still, his earnings aren't
enough to even pay the interest on his student loans.
Ridiculed and Threatened
Bridges got married in 1994
and for much of the past 16 years, he said he and his wife have lived in
"sheer terror" of relentless, abusive collection agents. "They
used every manner of profanity imaginable," he says. "They ridiculed
me, my degree and my humanity."
"They misrepresented
themselves as being from the federal government," he adds, "and said
that if I didn't pay in full, they had ways and means of locating me and making
sure that me and all my family members were taken to court and made to testify.
"I'm the only survivor in
my family," Bridges says. But his wife's relatives are a large, close-knit
group. "I didn't want to drag her family through that."
Unfortunately for Bridges,
many of the debt collectors' threats came true. His wages have been garnished,
and his federal income taxes taken annually. "Sometimes, my tax return
would be as much as $2,500 or $3,000, but they always took it," says
Bridges. "My wife would have to file something called an innocent spouse
form," so the IRS wouldn't snatch any refund due her.
Then one day, Bridges and his
wife went to the Philippines, partly for recreation but mainly to escape the
isolation and pressure of living with his big debts. He says he actually got
the idea to stay abroad at the suggestion of a "friendly" debt
collector who told him: "You know you'll never pay this money off. People
like you usually just go to another country."
That idea stuck in his head.
So in 2006, he did just that, fleeing America to escape his student loans. In
recent years, Bridges and his wife have lived in the Philippines, taught at a
school there, and finally enjoyed an existence free from student loan
creditors.
Despite the peace that came
from living overseas, being away from family eventually gnawed at his wife. She
missed her daughter and grandchildren terribly, and wanted to be back in the
United States. "The fact that I have to hide from the student loan people
has been an incredible burden on both of us, and an incredible factor in the
tension in our marriage," Bridges says.
"I'm literally a
fugitive. I feel like a criminal," he adds. "I can't own anything.
I'm afraid of the knock on the door. I've got the blinds drawn. And when
there's a knock on the door or if someone drives up, I first peek out the
window to see if I recognize the person or the car. If I don't, I don't answer."
The only time he makes calls
to anyone is via Skype, to
avoid being tracked. "I've learned to survive, escape and evade,"
Bridges says, "even in my own country, from my own people, for doing what
they told me to do, getting a degree."
Bridges says he feels horrible
and disappointed about his inability to pay his debts, and that he only fled
America to be done with the collection agents. Living incognito before was bad
enough, especially because it was "very isolating and embarrassing to
constantly change phone numbers every month or two," he explains.
That's why Bridges is now back
in the U.S. just for a short time. He said he loves his wife deeply, but they
are currently separated and plan to divorce, so that she can finally live
freely without the hassles and stress associated with his student loans.
Going through with the
divorce, he says, "is the least I can do for her."
Is College Still Worth It?
C. Cryn Johannsen is an independent
student loan advocate who is in contact with thousands of debtors, via her
research and her role as the Online Brand Advocate for SponsorChange.org, a non-profit that
helps people whittle down their student loans by performing meaningful
volunteer work.
Johannsen says she is
"acutely aware of the emotional toll of being on the brink of financial
disaster due to a degree hanging on your wall. That's why so many (former
students) resent the fact that they were told to go to school and pursue a
degree."
Countless people, says
Johannsen, "feel like college is a bait and switch trap. That's wrong.
What's particularly tragic about this sentiment is that it's fostering a
general sense that education
is not worth it."
"In my view, that's a
dangerous position to hold, especially for the well-being and growth of a
democratic society," she adds.
Unlike individuals with big
mortgages, numerous credit card debts or massive medical bills, people with
enormous student loans can't wipe out college debt in bankruptcy court.
Consequently, depending on whose statistics you believe, anywhere from 6.7%
to as many as 33%
of federal student loans are now in default. In addition, America's $830
billion in student
loan debt now exceeds credit card debt, which totals $826 billion.
Despite these bleak numbers,
statistics alone paint an incomplete picture of the depth and complexity of the
student loan crisis. As the stories above illustrate, the student
loan dilemma clearly goes far beyond its economic price tag.
Haunted for Life
Now living alone, Bridges, the
college professor, wakes up daily at 4 a.m. He spends at least one hour each
morning surfing the Internet, reading expat discussion-group chats, and
researching countries he can go to in order to again flee his student loan
debt.
"I'd love to stay here.
I've got friends in this area I've had for almost 30 years," he says
wistfully. "But the alternative is being persecuted and prosecuted."
Just leaving America, however,
won't end the constant reminders that he owes money he can never possibly pay
back. That's because next year, when he turns 66, Bridges will start to collect
Social Security.
But those who default on
federal student loans can have 15% of their Social
Security retirement benefits garnished. So for the rest of his life,
Bridges says, "I fully expect they'll take that, too."
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