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Terre Haute Tribune-StarA year ago, 32-year-old Brittany Cahill owned a $185,000 home, drove an Eclipse Spyder and operated her own business.
Today, she is homeless, and she and her two children, Krystian and Cheyenne Mason, live in the Bethany House emergency shelter. “If you would have told me a year ago that I would be in a homeless shelter, I would have laughed in your face,” she said in a recent interview in the Bethany House resident kitchen.
... Reflecting on the life she left behind in Kentucky, Cahill said she had a water and fire restoration cleaning business for several years before increased competition and the poor economy took a toll and she went out of business.
“The mistakes I made both in my personal life and my business life was just a lack of savings,” she said.
“I was sold into a mortgage beyond what I should have been. I had picked out a much lower-cost home” but a mortgage broker convinced her to buy a new home that she really couldn’t afford. “I was in over my head with my mortgage,” she said.
She bought nice things “and gave my kids everything they wanted — you know, kind of the American dream thing. You want to give your kids what they want: Nikes and Xboxes, trampolines and go-carts, the whole nine yards.”
But when she went out of business and couldn’t make payments on her home, she lost it. She looked for other work, but the jobs just weren’t there.
... While embarrassed at being homeless, she wants to share her story and to let people know it can happen to anyone. “You’re only one paycheck away, most of us,” she said. “The way that society in general in America has lived, that’s the reality.”
Her advice now is to “save every penny you have extra. That should be the new American dream. Save. Build that savings account so that when the economy or your situation changes, you have something to fall back on.”
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