Sometimes a phone call to a financial advice show reveals just how quickly life can financially unravel. That's what happened when Dave, a single father from Los Angeles, dialed into The Ramsey Show recently with a story that's equal parts heartbreaking and all too common.
When Crisis Meets Credit Cards
Three years ago, Dave faced what he described as a life-or-death family crisis. The resolution cost him $140,000, all of it charged to credit cards. "I have no regrets. I would do that again every day," he told the hosts, making it clear the crisis was worth every dollar. But worth it or not, the financial aftermath has been crushing.
The debt is spread across multiple cards, some carrying balances of $22,000, others hitting $32,000. Interest rates range from 25% to 32%, which means the debt is growing faster than he can pay it down. Dave pulls in about $8,400 a month, but his mortgage alone takes half of that. The rest disappears into minimum payments, gas, and food. "No disposable income, no backup money whatsoever," he explained. "If I had another crisis, I would drown."
He's raising a five-year-old daughter on his own, with no help. And he just discovered The Ramsey Show days before calling in, hoping for a lifeline.
The House Isn't Helping
Co-host John Delony didn't mince words. "Your house is not a blessing, brother. It's killing you," he said. Spending 50% of your income on housing is a massive red flag in personal finance. Co-host Jade Warshaw agreed, noting that "the mortgage is a bigger problem than the credit card debt almost."
There's a twist, though. Dave's mortgage payment is temporarily inflated because he fell behind on property taxes during the crisis. His lender rolled those costs into his escrow account, ballooning the monthly bill. But that adjustment will drop away in March, reducing his payment by $1,500. That's real relief, but it doesn't solve the underlying problem.
No Magic Bullet
Dave asked whether he should work with a third-party debt relief company that promised to negotiate his balances down. The hosts shut that down immediately. "No, no, no, no, no," Delony said. "Don't do that. It's a total scam."
Warshaw explained that these companies essentially tell you to stop paying your creditors, trash your credit score, and then charge you fees for the privilege. "If you really wanted to go that route, couldn't you do that yourself?" she asked. "You don't have to do that."
Instead, the advice was straightforward: Dave needs to earn more money. And he needs to get creative about it.
DoorDash With a Five-Year-Old
Warshaw floated an idea that might sound unconventional but reflects the reality of Dave's situation. "Can you take your kid with you to do some DoorDash and to do some Uber Eats?" she asked. "I've seen it. And to do some grocery runs for folks. That's what you've got to do. That's the only way you're paying this off."
She wasn't trying to sugarcoat it. "There's not going to be anything comfortable about it. There's not going to be anything easy about it." But with no room in the budget and no help on the horizon, the path forward involves finding hours wherever they exist—and sometimes that means bringing your daughter along for the ride.
It's a tough spot, and there's no quick fix. But Dave's willingness to call in and ask for help suggests he's ready to do what it takes. The math is brutal, the timeline is long, but the first step is understanding exactly where you stand. And for Dave, that conversation just happened.