When a Small Favor Becomes a Financial Catastrophe
Here's a story that'll make you think twice before handing over your credit card, even to family. A 21-year-old woman recently shared her nightmare on Reddit after what she thought would be a simple favor exploded into a full-blown financial crisis.
The setup was straightforward enough: in mid-December, her mother asked to use her credit card to cover a single $1,500 bill. Seemed reasonable. But when she checked her account a few days later, she discovered something that made her stomach drop: $6,000 had been charged to the card.
"Most [was spent] on paying her bills," she wrote, "but she took out a grand and a half at ATMs."
The damage went beyond just the debt. The unexpected charges maxed out her credit utilization, sending her credit score into freefall from a respectable 720 down to 635. And the timing couldn't have been worse. She'd just spent over a week in the hospital, missing work and facing bills from a high-deductible insurance plan. Now she was staring at an $8,000 hole with limited ways to climb out.
"I know it's partially my own fault and I'm kicking myself for being so stupid and letting this happen," she admitted.
She tried the obvious moves: applying for debt consolidation loans and balance transfer cards to get some breathing room. But with two existing loans already on her books (one auto, one personal), lenders kept turning her down.
Reddit Weighs In With Hard-Earned Wisdom
The response from the Reddit community was swift and pointed. One of the most upvoted comments cut straight to immediate damage control: "Change your credit card number. Your mom may have saved your credit card information online or written it down and might try to use it again without your permission."
Others went further, urging her to freeze her credit reports with all three bureaus. The concern? Parents who've crossed financial boundaries once often don't stop there. Some have been known to open entirely new accounts in their children's names.
The thread filled with personal stories that ranged from frustrating to heartbreaking. "My father asked me for money," one commenter shared. "At first he was grateful. Then it morphed into entitlement and irritation when I didn't accommodate his requests."
Another hit even harder: "The worst mistake I ever made was not pressing charges against my mother when she screwed my credit before I was even an adult."
But not everyone was doom and gloom. Several commenters offered reassurance that the situation, while painful, wasn't terminal. "Take a deep breath," wrote someone who'd been through worse. "You're young and you'll be okay in the end. This is an expensive lesson but not a death sentence."




