'My dad is a jerk!' 22-year-old 'brat' blows $90,000 college fund on vacations and clothes and attacks her parents for refusing to use their retirement fund to bail her out
Kim, whose last name is not known, called the Atlanta radio show The Bert Show to ask for advice
Her grandparents set her up with a college fund that was supposed to last four years, but she spent it all on tuition, clothes, and vacations
She was afraid to tell her parents, who then refused to give her more money or co-sign a loan unless she got a job
Kim didn't want to work and called it 'embarrassing' - prompting the hosts to mock her, while callers described her as a 'spoiled brat'
Published: 13:33 EST, 23 July 2015 | Updated: 07:02 EST, 24 July 2015
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One 22-year-old incoming college senior is 'freaking out' about the fact that she's already spent her entire college fund a year short of graduation - and has enraged people all over the internet, who think the 'spoiled brat' should grow up and get a job.
The young woman, who goes only by Kim, has now called in four times to Atlanta radio's The Bert Show, each time taking listeners through another aspect of her stressful saga. Despite the fact that her grandparents set her up with a $90,000 college fund that was intended to last for four years, Kim, who is about to start her senior year, has already spent it all on tuition, books, clothes - and vacations.
But initially, instead of taking responsibility and getting a job, Kim blamed her parents for not teaching her how to budget properly - and faced the backlash of others who've called her 'entitled' and said she needs to get her act together.
'That's embarrassing': Student scoffs at idea of getting job
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Uh-oh: A 22-year-old named Kim called into the Atlanta radio show The Bert Show last week to ask for advice about spending her entire college fund too quickly (file photo used)
Last week, Yahoo Parenting reports, Kim called into the local radio show (which is syndicated in 11 states) to discuss her dilemma.
'Years ago my grandparents set up a college fund for me, which was amazing,' she began. '[But] I haven’t been very good with my budget for school. The first payment for my senior year just arrived, and I don’t have the money, basically.'
I just wasn't very good with my budget. I took my college break money out of there, and maybe I shouldn't have
She explained that she was 'hooked up' for all four years of college, with almost $90,000. But due to what the show's hosts jokingly describe as a 'banking error' on her part, Kim is now left with no money left to pay the $10,000 tuition bill for the first semester of her senior year - or the $10,000 bill that will come once her second semester starts.
'I’ve just been avoiding it. Like, I knew that the bill was coming,' she said, adding that she'd already visited her school's financial aid office and applied for scholarships with no luck.
'I just wasn't very good with my budget,' she went on. 'I also [used] that budget for school clothes and stuff like that. My college break money, I [took] out of there, and maybe I should have not done that.'
That college break was a trip to Europe, which she 'figured was part of my education'.
The show's hosts were incredulous and told her she was going to have to suck it up and break the bad news to her parents.
Is she serious? The radio show's hosts had trouble taking Kim seriously and told her repeatedly to grow up and take responsibility
One of the hosts, Kristin Klingshirn, asked her: 'Do you know what a big part of growing up is?'
'I think I'm experiencing my first lesson,' Kim answered. Kristin agreed: 'It's taking responsibility and accountability You need to come clean to your parents, and you need to borrow the money from them and pay every penny back.'
Unfortunately for Kim, her parents weren't ready to lend her the money.
My dad was a bit of a jerk about it. He just sort of chuckled, like I'm stupid or something
Calling back The Bert Show for a follow-up, she explained that after having an open and honest conversation with her mom and dad, she was told that they couldn't help her - a reaction that Kim did not expect.
'My dad was so - just a little bit of a jerk about it,' she said. He just sort of chuckled, like I'm so stupid or something.'
Kim expressed that it was unfair of them to treat her that way because it was their fault that she spent her money so irresponsibly in the first place, saying: 'Maybe they should have taught me to budget a little more... They never sat me down and had a real serious talk about it.'
While her father said they didn't have more cash to give her, Kim said that was a 'lie', as she knew her parents had a retirement account that her dad had been contributing to for 'a million years'.
The hosts of the show then told her that she was learning a valuable lesson, and would now have to go to the bank for a loan. Kim, though, hadn't accepted that as the next step, and voiced frustration that she would have to actually go 'inside' - a word she stressed - a bank to apply for one, and couldn't just do it online.
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Laying blame: Despite the fact that Kim admitted to spending some of her money on socializing with her friends and shopping, she attacked her parents for failing to teach her how to budget
Somehow, though, she managed to make herself go inside a bank - and called the show back afterward for another update. She recounted how she filled out forms, 'wrote a lot', and was told by a woman who worked at the bank that she would need her parents to co-sign the loan - which she would then have to start paying back immediately.
That created a new problem for Kim, who explained that she never thought of getting a job to earn money. Her parents said that they would only co-sign on the condition that Kim found part-time employment, which she called 'embarrassing'.
'My job is being a student right now. I never planned on working through college,' she said.
My job is being a student right now. I never planned on working through college
She added: 'Maybe I'll tell my parents I'll be a stripper if they don't co-sign.'
Callers began phoning in to express their disgust with the 22-year-old. A man named Josh, who worked through college and took out $30,000 in loans, said: 'This girl needs to get over herself and get a freaking job.'
'I would like to tell this spoiled brat to grow up and get a job,' a 45-year-old caller named Michelle chimed in.
Finally, it started to seem like Kim was growing up - a bit. She phoned back a fourth time to tell The Bert Show that she was calling local businesses near her school to apply for jobs, though it was difficult because she had no work history. She was also quite bitter about it, and annoyed with her parents.
'I know they're trying to teach me a lesson, and blah blah blah, and character building, but I hope they realize that this can have such a negative effect on grades, and [on me] as a person,' she said, whining about the fact that she would have to work at least 15 hours a week to get by.
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The verdict: Reactions were split, with some calling out Kim for being spoiled and others blaming her parents for raising a brat
In addition to the callers who voiced disbelief that Kim could be so entitled, a thread on Reddit popped up to dissect her story.
'Working while in college is embarrassing? I had jobs throughout college and still had to pawn s*** to pay for books. This person sucks,' said one commenter.
Others wrote that they hoped people didn't think that Kim was representative of all millennials, as many of them work hard and take out loans to pay for college. According to a survey by student loans company Sallie Mae, three-quarters of students work at least part-time while earning a degree.
I hope they realize that [working] can have a negative effect on my grades and on me as a person
However, not everyone is laying the blame solely on Kim. Many adults - including Bert Weiss, the host of the radio show - think the parents should actually shoulder some of it as well. Some have said that Kim's mom and dad messed up by raising a girl who is so entitled, and not teaching her how to budget money well.
Several people even came Kim's defense, arguing that the cost of living for a college student - including tuition - is higher than ever before in history. In fact, $90,000, they claim, isn't very much money at all when considering the true cost of attending a college or university.
Kim's tuition alone, for four years, is $80,000 - which would have left her $10,000 to pay for school supplies, clothing, food, and entertainment over the course of her college career. The College Board estimated the average living expense outside of tuition for students - including housing, transportation, and other miscellaneous costs - to be about $11,660 to $17,410 for the nine-month 2014-2015 school year alone.
Of course, it seems that it is mostly her attitude that has turned people off, rather than the rate at which she spent money.
'This made me seriously angry. I worked 50+ hours a week at two s***ty jobs to pay my way through school,' wrote one person on Reddit. 'I learned more about life working those two jobs than I did in college. I learned how hard it is to make it on minimum wage jobs. I learned to have respect for people working s***ty jobs
Wow. The entitlement is scary. She's blaming her parents for not teaching g her to budget? She is in college! She couldn't figure that out?! I am betting her parents have tried to reign her in during the last few years and she blew them off and that is the cause of them being 'jerks' about it.
-- Edited by NAOW on Friday 24th of July 2015 09:39:33 AM
Well it's clear that her parents messed up big time in raising her. But she bears some responsibility for the way she is acting about it. She needs to suck it up.
And yes, if she hangs around a certain type of people at college, having a part time job is embarrassing. There are plenty of people for whom that is simply not done. I am not saying they are right, obviously they are NOT, but it's clear she is hanging around other rich kids who would ostracize her for having a job. She doesn't understand that there are other people to be friends with who will get it.
Plenty of kids in the college atmosphere simply do not understand the words "I can't afford it". They will respond "just ask your parents for the money". No, my parents can't afford it either.
But this VSS needs to grow up and deal with it.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
Ugh. I worked full time while in school. You'd catch me out at night studying in a bar!
This.
As did most of us. But the people she hangs out with don't and have never had a job. That's why she can't bring herself to do it. No one she knows is doing it and are telling her she is above that.
I am not trying to defend her obnoxious behavior. I am just saying there is a whole different world out there that we don't understand. A world of rich kids who seriously don't understand not being able to afford something. A whole bunch of kids whose parents have failed them big time.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
Ugh. I worked full time while in school. You'd catch me out at night studying in a bar!
This.
As did most of us. But the people she hangs out with don't and have never had a job. That's why she can't bring herself to do it. No one she knows is doing it and are telling her she is above that.
I am not trying to defend her obnoxious behavior. I am just saying there is a whole different world out there that we don't understand. A world of rich kids who seriously don't understand not being able to afford something. A whole bunch of kids whose parents have failed them big time.
This is NOT her parents' fault. They didn't give her the trust fund. They are the ones saying she has to get a job. She's an adult. Sink or swim time.
l
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
I totally agree. But it IS her parents' fault that she is an entitled jerk. She has zero respect for money and has zero knowledge of how to budget. Some of that is on them.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
I totally agree. But it IS her parents' fault that she is an entitled jerk. She has zero respect for money and has zero knowledge of how to budget. Some of that is on them.
Maybe not. Maybe they tried and the grandparents spoiled her rotten. The fact dad is laughing at her request makes me think he's not all that into spoiling her.
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LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
My brother had to quit college for two years to work full time to pay down debt. He went back and finished.
This girl is acting like a brat.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
Well, the parents are have some blame as well if they allowed her to blow thru that much money. I don't care if it was entrusted to her, there are ways to exert your influence over your young adult child who is still dependent on you. If she took the trust and moved out and lived independently, then fine, nothing they could have done. But, if she was under their roof at all, then they certainly could have enacted some rules on her and exerted some control for her own good. I really think I would have been able to convince my son or daughter to invest a portion of that money into some untouchable account or something for their long term benefit.
If there were no restrictions on the trust, then the parents can't do anything other than voice concerns.
And who knows, maybe they did. And maybe they told her she would have to lay in the bed she was making.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
If there were no restrictions on the trust, then the parents can't do anything other than voice concerns.
And who knows, maybe they did. And maybe they told her she would have to lay in the bed she was making.
My son is 19. He lives at home, sleeps in our bed, eats our food and we pay most of his tuition to tech school. So, yeah, I will exert some control over you life. You don't get full control over your own life until you are independent adult, supporting yourself and paying your own way.
This is a good example for the 'Personal Responsibility' thread.
This is what I was thinking!
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“You may shoot me with your words, you may cut me with your eyes, you may kill me with your hatefulness, but still, like air, I'll rise!” ― Maya Angelou
I am just saying that I would have been very proactive in making sure my kid managed this money well and not just taken a hands off approach with Ok, here's your check, go figure it out. But, I do think my kids would respect that input and understand that I know what I am talking about. Maybe that's the difference.
Well it's clear that her parents messed up big time in raising her. But she bears some responsibility for the way she is acting about it. She needs to suck it up.
And yes, if she hangs around a certain type of people at college, having a part time job is embarrassing. There are plenty of people for whom that is simply not done. I am not saying they are right, obviously they are NOT, but it's clear she is hanging around other rich kids who would ostracize her for having a job. She doesn't understand that there are other people to be friends with who will get it.
Plenty of kids in the college atmosphere simply do not understand the words "I can't afford it". They will respond "just ask your parents for the money". No, my parents can't afford it either.
But this VSS needs to grow up and deal with it.
I agree with this so much. When DN was in high school she was on the track team. She ran track with girls from very wealthy neighborhoods. They would invite her over for different things. She would always come home complaining that we didn't live in as nice of a house and she didn't have as nice of clothes. I would point out that there were two parents in that family so their were two incomes. For a long time she developed a spoiled brat attitude. What made it worse was when she was eight we got in a car accident with a drunk kid. She went through the window and ended up receiving about 150 stitches in her head. She had two trust funds basically. One that could be taken out of at any time for things like plastic surgery and another for damages. I think it was about $28,000 which was a lot more back then. I tried to talk to her about not blowing it. About saving it for school. And on and on. But like a lot of kids when she turned 18 she blew threw it. She did buy a nice used care but most of it was just blown on nothing.
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“You may shoot me with your words, you may cut me with your eyes, you may kill me with your hatefulness, but still, like air, I'll rise!” ― Maya Angelou
And the difference is, your money vs. their money. The trust is the girls.
I'm not defending her actions. Just stating that she is an adult and as such, the parents have no say over it. They can't do anything about it.
They don't have a legal leg to stand on.
As for how they handle living arrangements, that's another story.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
I am just saying that I would have been very proactive in making sure my kid managed this money well and not just taken a hands off approach with Ok, here's your check, go figure it out. But, I do think my kids would respect that input and understand that I know what I am talking about. Maybe that's the difference.
I did that with DN but ultimately if they are of age they can do whatever they want with it.
__________________
“You may shoot me with your words, you may cut me with your eyes, you may kill me with your hatefulness, but still, like air, I'll rise!” ― Maya Angelou
Ugh. I worked full time while in school. You'd catch me out at night studying in a bar!
This.
Me too. I commuted 1 1/2 hours to Boston for work via train. I studied on the train, worked full time, paid my way through college. Best learning experience I ever had.
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Sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes you're the bug.
I totally agree. But it IS her parents' fault that she is an entitled jerk. She has zero respect for money and has zero knowledge of how to budget. Some of that is on them.
Or perhaps the grandparents who left her the college money bought her everything she wanted growing up and turned her into a brat. How many threads or Dear Abby letters have we seen about Grandparents doing that against the parent's wishes and the parents being told to suck it up?
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Sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes you're the bug.
I totally agree. But it IS her parents' fault that she is an entitled jerk. She has zero respect for money and has zero knowledge of how to budget. Some of that is on them.
Or perhaps the grandparents who left her the college money bought her everything she wanted growing up and turned her into a brat. How many threads or Dear Abby letters have we seen about Grandparents doing that against the parent's wishes and the parents being told to suck it up?
I think the correct term is Get over it.
__________________
“You may shoot me with your words, you may cut me with your eyes, you may kill me with your hatefulness, but still, like air, I'll rise!” ― Maya Angelou
I am just saying that I would have been very proactive in making sure my kid managed this money well and not just taken a hands off approach with Ok, here's your check, go figure it out. But, I do think my kids would respect that input and understand that I know what I am talking about. Maybe that's the difference.
But she already had the entitled attitude and the parents obviously had zero control over the trust so she happily spent. We haven't heard their side on this. They may have tried to guide her (my guess is they did and warned her which is why the father laughed when she complained).
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Sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes you're the bug.
And the difference is, your money vs. their money. The trust is the girls.
I'm not defending her actions. Just stating that she is an adult and as such, the parents have no say over it. They can't do anything about it.
They don't have a legal leg to stand on.
As for how they handle living arrangements, that's another story.
Fine, then you can't live with me, take your money and move out and figure it out. If I am subsidizing your life, I have some say over it. And I am sure they were subsidizing her life until the day she received the Trust. They should have been able to guide her to wisely invest a portion of it.
I wouldn't give my kids money if they blew through their trust fund either. DN learned the hard way. Now she's working AND going to school.
__________________
“You may shoot me with your words, you may cut me with your eyes, you may kill me with your hatefulness, but still, like air, I'll rise!” ― Maya Angelou
And the difference is, your money vs. their money. The trust is the girls.
I'm not defending her actions. Just stating that she is an adult and as such, the parents have no say over it. They can't do anything about it.
They don't have a legal leg to stand on.
As for how they handle living arrangements, that's another story.
Fine, then you can't live with me, take your money and move out and figure it out. If I am subsidizing your life, I have some say over it. And I am sure they were subsidizing her life until the day she received the Trust. They should have been able to guide her to wisely invest a portion of it.
You seem to think you can control another adult's money.
You cant.
Even if they live with you.
What you can do is not pay their bills. Require rent. Not let them live with you.
But you can't make them save, invest, or anything else with their money.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
The article says she paid the first 3 years. So she didn't just blow the whole $90k.
__________________
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
An 18 yr old doesn't have the first freaking clue. So of them dont even know how to write a check let alone navigate the banking system.
Why? That was 8th grade economics and finance.
And you can't wait till 18 to teach it. You start teach financial responsibility with the tooth fairy money.
__________________
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
An 18 yr old doesn't have the first freaking clue. So of them dont even know how to write a check let alone navigate the banking system.
Not all 18 YO's. Only those who have never been forced to do so. DS refused all the credit card offers he received while in college. BTW, he worked at UPS 25 hours a week which gave him FT benefits + college tuition reimbursement and money to pay his other bills. The tuition reimbursement covered his first 2 1/2 years of school, I made him take out loans in his name for the rest and when he successfully passed, I paid the loans off. I think my struggling and not being able to provide the money, but could guide him, was the best gift I ever gave him. He is not stupid with money, and while others his age are still renting and saddled with Student Loan debt, he has zero debt and now owns and investment property.
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Sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes you're the bug.
The article says she paid the first 3 years. So she didn't just blow the whole $90k.
Yep, she did good paying most of her tuition. They only issue is being a brat over the rest of her tuition. Having to borrow 20K will not break the bank.
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Sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes you're the bug.
The article says she paid the first 3 years. So she didn't just blow the whole $90k.
Yep, she did good paying most of her tuition. They only issue is being a brat over the rest of her tuition. Having to borrow 20K will not break the bank.
To me, it's the refusal to consider a job that really makes her sound terrible. Her money would have went a lot further if she'd had jobs along the way to pay for the fun stuff and kept the money for college only.
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LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
I totally agree. But it IS her parents' fault that she is an entitled jerk. She has zero respect for money and has zero knowledge of how to budget. Some of that is on them.
Or perhaps the grandparents who left her the college money bought her everything she wanted growing up and turned her into a brat. How many threads or Dear Abby letters have we seen about Grandparents doing that against the parent's wishes and the parents being told to suck it up?
You don't have to allow the grandparents to run rough shod over your rules. You set boundaries for what the grandparents can spend and how they can spend it and if they don't adhere to those guidelines, you don't allow them access to the child. You can buy as many books and experiences ( dance lessons, trips with the grandparents, etc) as you like for my child. You may NOT buy them "stuff". I am the parent and I make the rules. Period. I am the one ultimately responsible for how my child turns out and if the grandparents can't accept that...tough.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
Also, she is a senior in college with no work history. Her parents are responsible for that. Sounds like she got everything she wanted and was never made to earn her own spending money. That is totally their fault.
__________________
Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
The article says she paid the first 3 years. So she didn't just blow the whole $90k.
Yep, she did good paying most of her tuition. They only issue is being a brat over the rest of her tuition. Having to borrow 20K will not break the bank.
To me, it's the refusal to consider a job that really makes her sound terrible. Her money would have went a lot further if she'd had jobs along the way to pay for the fun stuff and kept the money for college only.
Yep. Working never hurt anyone.
__________________
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
The article says she paid the first 3 years. So she didn't just blow the whole $90k.
Yep, she did good paying most of her tuition. They only issue is being a brat over the rest of her tuition. Having to borrow 20K will not break the bank.
To me, it's the refusal to consider a job that really makes her sound terrible. Her money would have went a lot further if she'd had jobs along the way to pay for the fun stuff and kept the money for college only.
Yep. Working never hurt anyone.
And if her parents had thought that, they would not have waited until her senior year of college to tell her to get a job!
__________________
Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
She did pay for the first 3 years out of that money.
She didn't frivolously spend the whole 90k.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
The first mistake was the grandparents actually letting the girl access the college fund. No no no!
The grandparents should have maintained total control of the money, in their account, and written a check each time the semester bill was due.
Of course she is an entitled brat, and her behavior is abominable.
But handing over a huge sum of money like that to a young person is not wise.
Especially if that young person has zero experience with handling money and is used to having what she wants when she wants it. There are a lot of kids who know the value of money and who would have taken the money and been responsible with it. Those are the same kids who know the value of money because they have had to work for it.
Many colleges allow you to pre-pay for all 4 years. My cousin locked in his tuition rate by doing just that, increases in the future did not effect him. She would have been wise to go to the bursar' office and pre-pay using all the money and then she could have done whatever she wanted with the extra and it wouldn't have been such a tragic ordeal for her.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
Well it says she is a senior in college with no work history, so yeah, I DO know that is what happened.
You don't know how many times they told her to get a job.
I read it as more of she made this bed and her parents are letting her lay in it.
From the father's reaction, I'd say he tried and she would not listen.
Now it is sink or swim time.
__________________
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.