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Concerned woman on a cozy couch

The landlord says I’m competing with other applicants and have to pay to hold the unit. How do I avoid getting scammed?

You finally find a place that looks perfect, the landlord responds quickly, but then the pressure starts: “Other applicants are interested. If you want it, you need to pay a deposit to hold the unit.” This is exactly how rental scams work. The good news is you can protect yourself without losing every decent listing, as long as you know what to look for and how to slow the situation down.
February 10, 2026 Quinn Mercer
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
Worried Woman looking at credit card

I gave my daughter access to my credit card for emergencies, and now there are charges I don’t recognize. How do I confront her?

Handing your daughter a credit card for emergencies probably seemed like a smart idea at the time. After all, emergencies happen, and it can be reassuring to know she has access to help if she ever needs it. But spotting charges you don't recognize can make your stomach drop. Suddenly, what started as a safety net turns into a difficult conversation about money, trust, and boundaries.
June 5, 2026 J. Clarke
Expensive Collectibles

My husband keeps buying expensive collectibles and calls them investments, but I haven't seen any cash coming in. At what point is he just shopping?

“It’s an investment” can sound reassuring when a new watch, trading card, comic, or limited-edition figurine shows up at the door. Sometimes that claim is true. But if the value is hard to verify, the costs keep piling up, and the collection never seems to produce cash, it may be less like investing and more like expensive shopping.
June 5, 2026 Miles Brucker

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
Internalfb Image (9)

My fiance's parents want us to sign a contract promising we'll repay them for our wedding if we ever divorce. Is that a thing?

It is a jaw-dropping question, but it is not completely out of left field. Some families do ask engaged couples to sign agreements tied to wedding money, especially when parents are paying a large bill. The big issue is not whether people can ask, but whether a contract like that would actually hold up if the marriage ends.
June 4, 2026 Carl Wyndham
Internalfb Image (10)

My brother claims he deserves a larger share of our inheritance because he has kids and I don't. He has a point, but do my needs really matter less?

Money can turn a family disagreement into a full blown emotional storm, especially after a loss. One of the most common flashpoints is whether a sibling with children should receive more than a sibling without them. It feels personal, but the answer usually comes down to something much less dramatic. In most cases, what matters is the parent’s estate plan and state law, not who has kids.
June 4, 2026 Miles Brucker
puzzled man in office

My boss says I should feel "lucky to have a job" and stop asking about raises. Is loyalty worth more than money?

Few workplace comments sting like this one: “You should feel lucky to have a job.” It can sound like gratitude is being used as a substitute for fair pay. If your boss says that every time you bring up a raise, it is worth asking whether they are asking for loyalty while offering less in return.
June 4, 2026 Carl Wyndham
Investment Account

My parents secretly opened an investment account for my child and now expect me to follow their rules. How much say do grandparents get?

Finding out your parents quietly opened an investment account for your child can feel generous, invasive, or both at the same time. The biggest question usually comes fast. If grandparents put up the money, do they also get to make the rules? In most cases, the answer depends less on family dynamics and more on what type of account they actually opened.
June 4, 2026 Miles Brucker
Debt Settlement

I trusted a debt settlement company, and now my credit is worse than ever. Is there anyone who can help me now?

Did a debt settlement company hurt your credit? Learn how these programs work, the risks involved, and how to recover and get real help.
June 4, 2026 Allison Robertson
frustrated and scared woman holding credit card and phone with documents, in a cafe

My sister expects me to help pay for her wedding because I make more money and "we've always talked about it." Am I selfish for saying no?

When one sibling earns more, family money expectations can get complicated fast. A request to help pay for a wedding may sound loving on the surface, but it can also feel like pressure wrapped in tulle. If your sister expects your paycheck to help fund her big day, saying no does not automatically make you selfish.
June 3, 2026 Carl Wyndham
Emergency Fund

My wife found out I had a separate emergency fund she didn't know about. Now she thinks I was planning to leave her. Was I wrong?

A wife discovered that her husband had a separate emergency fund she did not know about, and the emotional fallout was immediate. In his telling, the money was meant as a personal safety net, not an exit plan. But for many couples, secret cash does not look like caution at first glance. It looks like concealment.
June 3, 2026 Miles Brucker