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Angry older woman in house, man sitting on couch in background

I let my ex stay at my place for a month while I was away. Now he says 30 days gave him squatter's rights and he won’t leave. Is that really the law?

Then you get home and discover that your former partner has no intention of leaving. Worse yet, they're throwing around legal terms and acting like they suddenly have rights to your home. It sounds ridiculous. But situations like this happen more often than many people realize. And it might not be as simple as you think.
July 1, 2026 Jesse Singer
Cash Advance

I keep taking cash advances to pay other cash advances. What’s the endgame here?

If you keep using cash advances to pay off other cash advances, you’re not alone, and you’re not broken, but you are stuck in one of the most expensive debt cycles out there. Let’s talk about what’s really happening and where this road usually leads.
January 21, 2026 Marlon Wright

My boss makes us chant affirmations to a cardboard cutout of himself every morning. Is this a cult—or just illegal?

A hilarious yet insightful look at what to do when your boss forces employees to chant affirmations to a cardboard cutout every morning. Learn whether this bizarre workplace ritual is a cult, illegal, or just deeply unprofessional—plus practical advice, legal context, and strategies for protecting your sanity. Perfect for readers navigating toxic or absurd office dynamics.
December 17, 2025 Jack Hawkins
AI-generated image of a couple that retired at different times.

My spouse and I retired at different times, and planning became way more difficult than expected. Is it always so complicated?

Many couples spend years planning for retirement, imagining the day they'll finally leave work behind together. Then reality arrives, and one spouse retires while the other keeps working for several more years.
July 1, 2026 Quinn Mercer
Internalfb Image (2)

My wife secretly put her parents on our family phone plan and never told me. Is this the kind of financial secrecy that ruins marriages?

Finding out that a spouse quietly added other people to a shared phone plan can feel small on paper and huge in real life. It is not just about the monthly bill. It is about secrecy, trust, and whether one partner made a financial decision that affected both people without consent.
July 1, 2026 Miles Brucker
Internalfb Image (3)

My parents want me to "loan" my inheritance to my brother until he gets back on his feet. Am I ever seeing that money again?

Few money conversations get messier faster than this one. A parent asks one child to “loan” inherited money to a struggling sibling, usually with a promise that it is temporary and will keep the peace. The hard question is the one nobody wants to say out loud: if this is family, and the borrower is already in trouble, what are the odds that money ever comes back?
July 1, 2026 Carl Wyndham
My fiance says we should merge our bank accounts

My fiance says we should merge our bank accounts before we're married because "it's just easier." I'm nervous, is doing that a mistake?

“It’s just easier” is one of the most persuasive lines in any relationship, especially when wedding planning is already swallowing your time and money. A shared account can simplify bill paying, rent, and everyday spending. But before you hand over full access to your cash, it is worth asking whether “easier” today could become messier tomorrow.
July 1, 2026 Miles Brucker
Facebook  Internal

My boss says employees who work from home shouldn't expect the same raises/opportunities as everyone else. Can companies really think like that?

If your boss says remote employees should not expect the same raises as office workers, it can feel less like feedback and more like a warning shot. The issue matters because pay increases shape long term earnings, retirement savings, and even future job offers. Companies can think this way, but whether they should is a much tougher question.
July 1, 2026 Carl Wyndham
disappointed woman with a man counting his sneaker collection

My husband emptied our vacation fund to buy limited-edition sneakers. He says these shoes are "better than stocks." Is this investing or a problem?

One day the travel money is sitting there, waiting for flights and hotel bookings. The next day it has been turned into a stack of limited-edition sneakers because your husband says they are “better than stocks.” That sounds dramatic, but it opens up a very real question about money, risk, and whether a collecting hobby has crossed into something more dangerous.
July 1, 2026 Miles Brucker
Nurse with yacht and billionaire in background

I just learned billionaires use a loophole to only pay 3.4% in taxes. How is that legal? Can I do that?

How can someone worth billions pay a lower tax rate than a teacher, a nurse, or a guy working construction? They make a whole lot more and pay a whole lot less. This can't be legal....Can it?
June 30, 2026 Jesse Singer

The Weirdest Shark Tank Products

Shark Tank has seen some amazing products go from kickstarter to bestseller. The show has also seen some of the most ineffective and just straight up bizarre inventions possible. Let's take a look at the weirdest Shark Tank products.
April 11, 2025 Nikolas C.

My boss told me to fake a family death so I could attend a conference in disguise. Am I complicit?

A compelling workplace-advice article exploring what to do when a boss demands unethical behavior—like faking a family death to attend a conference undercover. This engaging guide helps employees navigate toxic leadership, understand complicity, set boundaries, and protect their professional integrity with humor, insight, and practical strategies.
December 17, 2025 Jack Hawkins