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Parents hit their child up for financial bailout

By Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Dear Amy: Over the last 30 years, my father, a salesman who bounced between "commission only" jobs, has regularly borrowed money from family and friends.

This has resulted in defunct friendships and family disputes due to his inability to pay these loans back.

The most disheartening part is that he was using the money to afford a lifestyle for my mother that was never reasonable.

As they've grown older, they have been forced to give up some of the things that put them into financial hardship, including memberships to elite clubs and an overextended mortgage in a neighborhood they couldn't afford.

Now in their 70s and living in an apartment, my father continues to work minimum-wage jobs to make ends meet. I don't think he has ever been honest with my mother about their financial situation, and she is unaware that he owes money to so many people. She continues to spend because he is not honest with her.

My father continues to ask me for money. I wrote off what I have lent him over the years long ago, but with a family of my own to support I can no longer "write off" anything.

 

I recently told him I can no longer lend him money. I carry so much guilt for the years he supported me while I was growing up and feel like I'm failing him by not supporting him now.

How can I help him understand that he needs help budgeting and should be communicating with my mother? I fear that my mom will make his life miserable if she finds out the truth.

-- Not a Loan Officer

Dear Not a Loan: I hope you don't actually believe that you owe your father money now because he "supported you" while you were growing up.

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