10 Best Books for Building Financial Confidence After Debt
I stared at my bank account balance: $47.32. That was it. That was everything I had left after making my final student loan.
I stared at my bank account balance: $47.32. That was it. That was everything I had left after making my final student loan.
I work as a school counselor at Lincoln Elementary, which means I spend my days with kids between kindergarten and fifth grade. But I have a nine-year-old and.
I got the call on a Tuesday morning in March. My mother was in the hospital -- something with her heart, they weren't sure yet, but it was serious enough that.
The rejection letter came on a Tuesday. I know it was a Tuesday because I remember the light through the window of my apartment — that specific late afternoon.
I need to tell you about the afternoon I realized I had been angry for six years and didn't know.
I turned 37 in the apartment with the dry-erase marker stains on the kitchen table, and I remember thinking: three years from 40, and I am not who I thought.
It was my friend Mara's birthday, six years ago, in a bar in the Pearl District that had exposed brick and string lights and approximately nine hundred people.

Three weeks into my new management role, I locked myself in a conference room and.

I have a daughter named Nora, who is nine. She is at the exact age where she has started to notice things — not just what people say, but how they say it, what.

I have a habit I've never fully explained to anyone: I keep certain books on a separate shelf. Not the one in the living room where people can see what I'm.