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I’m the only woman in an office full of men who constantly make “jokes” about my appearance. I thought we were beyond this in 2025. What should I do?

You walk into work, and before you’ve even logged in, someone comments on your outfit. Another chimes in with a “joke” about your body. Everyone laughs, except you. It’s 2025—shouldn’t we be past this? Spoiler: we’re not.
September 11, 2025 Jesse Singer
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My friend says people who keep emergency funds are losing money every day. Is having too much cash actually a mistake?

Your friend is not imagining things. Cash can lose purchasing power when inflation runs higher than the interest your savings account pays. But that does not automatically mean emergency funds are a mistake. It means the real question is not whether to hold cash, but how much to hold and where to keep it.
June 16, 2026 Miles Brucker
average concerned woman face

My parents paid into the system for decades, but now they’re being denied benefits over paperwork. They need what they're owed, what can I do?

After decades of working and paying taxes, retirees expect the benefits they earned to be there when they need them. But small administrative mistakes can sometimes delay or even block access to those benefits. If your parents are facing a denial because of documentation issues, don't panic: There are still steps you can take to challenge the decision and protect what they are owed.
June 16, 2026 Carl Wyndham
Older couple with a lawyer

My parents are 75 years old and went to a lawyer to draft a will. He told them all they needed was a "Lady Bird" deed. What should they do?

The lawyer told them they might not need a traditional will at all. All they need, he says, is something called a 'Lady Bird' document. That sounds simple enough—but is it really? And should they take that advice?
June 15, 2026 Jesse Singer

The Most Bizarre Things That Sold High At Auctions

Whether it’s pure nostalgia, obsession, or just plain curiosity, these bizarre items prove that, at the right auction, anything can become a treasure.
March 31, 2025 Binet
vintage game console

Old Video Game Consoles That Sell For Thousands

Old game consoles used to be stashed away in closets or sold at yard sales for a few bucks. But today? Some of them are collector goldmines.
October 13, 2025 Allison Robertson
AI-generated image of brothers on a farm

My brother and I inherited farmland together. He wants to farm it, but I want to sell. How do we settle this?

Learn how siblings can resolve inherited farmland disputes when one wants to farm and the other wants to sell. Explore buyouts, partition actions, mediation, taxes, and heirs' property rights.
June 15, 2026 Peter Kinney
Internalfb Image

My husband keeps calling his sports betting an investment strategy. At what point is gambling just gambling?

Calling sports betting an investment strategy can make it sound disciplined, data driven, and almost respectable. But the label does not change the underlying activity. If money is being put at risk on an uncertain outcome in hopes of a payoff, that is gambling by definition.
June 15, 2026 Miles Brucker
Worried senior man reading utility bill and using laptop at home.

My bank reported a perfectly legal transaction, and now I feel like I’m under investigation. How do I get them to stop?

You sell a car, move some money between accounts, or make a large purchase, and suddenly your bank is asking questions. It can feel personal. You know the transaction was completely above board, but now you're wondering why your bank seems so interested in what you're doing with your own money. The frustrating part is that this happens more often than most people realize. Banks are required to watch for unusual activity, and sometimes perfectly legitimate transactions end up getting caught in the process.
June 14, 2026 J. Clarke
two brothers disagreeing

I helped my brother start a business, but now that he's earning profit he says I’m not owed anything. Should I take him to court?

Helping your brother get a business off the ground probably seemed like the right thing to do at the time. Maybe you put in money, spent countless hours helping, or opened doors that helped the company grow. Now the business is finally making money, and suddenly your brother is acting like you were just doing him a favor. Before you march into court, it's worth understanding what actually matters in a dispute like this.
June 13, 2026 J. Clarke
AI-generated image of a new homeowner concerned about a missing tree

I just bought a house and after closing I realized the sellers removed an expensive tree from the property. Can I get them to pay for a replacement?

You finally close on your new home, get the keys, and start settling in. Then you notice something is off: that large, beautiful tree that was in the yard when you toured the property is gone. Not trimmed. Not damaged. Completely removed. Now you’re left wondering what just happened and what you can do about it.
March 24, 2026 Quinn Mercer
Older man worried about retirement

I’m 60 years old and I just heard about the retirement Rule of 173—now I’m panicking. Am I too late?

Retirement advice has a way of making people panic. One minute you’re minding your business, and the next you’re hearing about some “Rule of 173” that supposedly everyone else learned 20 years ago. So, are you too late?
June 11, 2026 Jesse Singer