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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
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My pretty well-off sister wants me to help pay for our parents' nursing home because she "can't afford it." Do adult children have that obligation?

Your sister says she cannot afford Mom and Dad’s nursing home bill, so now she wants you to chip in. It feels personal, urgent, and maybe a little guilt-soaked. But before you write a check, it helps to know a key fact: in most cases, adult children are not automatically responsible for paying a parent’s nursing home bill.
June 17, 2026 Carl Wyndham
Facebook  Internal

My parents sold our cottage, but they gave all the money to my sister and told me it's because "she has children." Do I have any right to be upset?

Few family disputes sting like this one. Your parents sold the family cottage, turned the proceeds over to your sister, and explained it away with one painful reason: she has children and you do not. If that sounds unfair, you are not overreacting just because your feelings are hurt.
June 17, 2026 Carl Wyndham
woman-counting-the-money

How The Rule Of 114 Can Triple Your Investments

You’ve probably heard of the Rule of 72, the quick trick for estimating how long it takes money to double. The Rule of 114 is its less famous cousin. Instead of showing when your money might double, it helps estimate when it could triple.
June 17, 2026 J. Clarke
Caretaker looking concerned

I became my father’s caregiver, and now I’ve drained my own savings. Is there government support for people in my situation?

Most people don't become caregivers because they planned for it. One day you're helping your dad get to appointments, and before long you're managing medications, handling paperwork, driving him everywhere, and spending money you never expected to spend. If you've watched your own savings account shrink while caring for a parent, you're definitely not alone. The good news is that there may be government programs, tax breaks, and other forms of assistance that can help ease some of the financial pressure.
June 17, 2026 J. Clarke
Concerned older man looking at the camera

My wife handled all our taxes, and after she died I found out we owed the IRS thousands. Is there nothing I can do?

Found out you owe the IRS after your spouse handled taxes? Learn about innocent spouse relief, your options, and how to handle unexpected tax debt.
June 16, 2026 Allison Robertson

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