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After Bankruptcy: How to Establish Responsible Financial Habits

By Financial Tips, Personal Finance No Comments

The reality is, life after bankruptcy completely depends on your attitude.

Life after bankruptcy can look many different ways. For some, it is a scary time where money is tight and it seems like you are still trying to dig out of a bottomless hole. For others, it is a time of hope and opportunity; a chance to start again. The reality is, life after bankruptcy completely depends on your attitude. If you want to get your financial situation back on track and build good habits that foster financial stability, all you have to do is make a plan and stick to it. Staying disciplined can be challenging and stressful, but when you establish responsible financial habits after bankruptcy, you give yourself a chance to reach financial freedom again. Here are the best ways to do just that, from the Auburn & Opelika bankruptcy law experts at David S. Clark.

DISCLAIMER: The following blog post is just advice, and you will be better served to call David S. Clark with your bankruptcy questions. This blog contains helpful tips and advice, but is not professional legal advice, and shouldn’t treated as such.

Need Bankruptcy Help? Call David S. Clark

Create a Realistic Budget

One of the most intuitive and important steps in establishing healthy and responsible financial habits following Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy is to create a budget, and stick to it. The act of simply creating a budget for your spending habits means nothing if you don’t stay disciplined and follow the budget. 

Some important aspects of building a budget include knowing your regular income, knowing your regular expenses, tracking your spending, and setting realistic, achievable goals. Planning for a budget requires commitment and consistency, whether you are old school and want to take the approach of allocating envelopes for monthly expense categories, or want to use more technologically advanced methods, your budget will only serve you as well as you let it. For a more detailed look at making a budget, click here.

Start Saving Money & Create an Emergency Savings Fund

An obvious step in the right direction for those recovering from bankruptcy is to prioritize saving money. Emergency savings funds are important to have, and in addition to said emergency savings funds, it is very important to be regularly putting money away for the future, even if there aren’t any looming financial crises on the horizon. Open a savings account and start earning interest. Make it an absolute priority to live below your means. This is an essential fiscally responsible practice for anyone looking to have a healthy financial future. 

Apply for New Lines of Credit

Applying for new lines of credit after Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 Bankruptcy is also an important step to take. Although interest rates may be higher following bankruptcy, it is still important to begin building back good credit. It may take an extended amount of time before you are approved to open new lines of credit post-bankruptcy, but once you can, it is absolutely recommended that you do so. 

Credit builder loans, which are intended to help you rebuild credit following bankruptcy, are another great way to start rebuilding a healthy credit score and positive financial practices. Also, consider obtaining a secured credit card, which is backed by the balance in your savings account. This balance determines your credit limit, making it a safer option than using traditional credit cards.

Make Payments on Time

In order to keep building credit and instilling responsible financial habits, making payments on time is crucial. By avoiding late fees and paying your bills on time, or earlier, you will not only be building credit, but you will also be saving money! Timely payments cannot be overlooked as a critical part of being financially responsible after bankruptcy. Without this, you can face even higher interest rates, which can be crippling when trying to rebuild financial security. 

Keep a Low Credit Card Balance

Keeping a low credit card balance is a simple, effective way to maintain responsible spending habits. Monitoring your credit utilization ratio and keeping it low will help creditors see that you are making responsible financial decisions. Keeping your credit utilization ratio means that you are not using your line of credit up to its limit. Setting spending limits for yourself– and sticking to them– will help you establish responsible financial habits.

Avoid Quick Loans

Quick loans, where individuals can almost always receive cash, involve incredibly high interest rates, and often trap financially vulnerable individuals in another cycle of debt following bankruptcy. Though they can be tempting when payments are due and cash is short, find safer and less predatory solutions. 

Some examples of better ways to solve a cash shortage include borrowing from a church or nonprofit, or finding additional short term streams of revenue, like online sales or third-party food delivery services. There are many ways to make an honest dollar these days that only take a little time. Read here to learn more financial tips and alternatives to quick loans.

David S. Clark, Auburn & Opelika Bankruptcy Attorney

From his many valuable years of experience serving the Auburn and Opelika, Alabama community, David S. Clark is knowledgeable and prepared to help you start your journey back to financial security. If you need help navigating the stress, intricacies, and complexities of Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, contact David S. Clark, Attorney at Law today!

DISCLAIMER: The above blog post is just advice, and you will be better served to call David S. Clark with your bankruptcy questions. This blog contains helpful tips and advice, but is not professional legal advice, and shouldn’t treated as such.

Moses Wenslydale Moore–Alabama’s First African American Attorney

By Attorneys & Lawyers No Comments
The information in this post was gathered from the research compiled in an article from the December 27, 2021 edition of The Alabama Lawyer entitled, “Blazing the Trail: Alabama’s First Black Lawyers.” To read the article in its entirety, click here.

In a piece commemorating the first graduating class of African American attorneys of Howard University School of Law in Washington, D.C., a black newspaper commissioned them with the sobering reminder that they were going “into the world…to give to the false and hate inspired charge of the black man’s natural inferiority a living, forcible, and effective denial.”

One of those graduates, who likely read those very words and personally felt their gravity as one being commissioned, was Moses Wenslydale Moore.

DISCLAIMER: The following blog post is just advice, and you will be better served to call David S. Clark with your bankruptcy questions. This blog contains helpful tips and advice, but is not professional legal advice, and shouldn’t treated as such.

Need Bankruptcy Help? Call David S. Clark

An Inspiring Immigrant

Born in British Guiana on February 15, 1841, Moore was born a free man since Britain had already granted emancipation to enslaved people in 1832.

Not much is known about Moore’s early life, but years later in 1867, Moore was listed as a schoolteacher sailing from London to New York. The next year and a half of Moore’s life once again fell into relative historical obscurity, though we can be sure that he faced much uncertainty while in America given the state of the country after the Civil War during the tumultuous early years of Reconstruction.

In 1869, though, Moore enrolled at the Howard University School of Law to be a member of the 6-man class of black lawyers. This group of aspiring attorneys met in the home offices of their professors since they did not have proper classrooms at the time and they took evening classes since all of them worked full-time jobs.

The Move to Mobile

Following their graduation from the Howard University School of Law in 1871, all 6 graduating men were admitted to the Washington, D.C. bar. Soon after Moses Moore departed the nation’s capital bound for the Deep South–Mobile, Alabama.

One can only speculate what this black man was thinking while en route to the embattled “Heart of Dixie.” Six years prior to Moore’s move men, women, and children who looked like him were bound to work and live in subhuman conditions as slaves.

Surely many friends and family told him that attempting to work as an attorney was too dangerous for a black man. However, Moore was evidently undeterred and bound to be a “living, forcible, and effective denial” of hatred motivated by racist bigotry.

Admitted: An African American Attorney

While in Mobile, Moore was presented for examination in order to be admitted to the Alabama State Bar with no little public interest. After a “very satisfactory examination,” Moore was successfully admitted to the bar.

He then moved to Selma–further into the heart of Alabama–and it was when he lived here that he stood before the Alabama Supreme Court seeking admittance to practice law within the state. On January 4, 1872, Moses Wenslydale Moore was admitted to practice in Alabama.

A Black Lawyer’s Legacy

After only a few years in Alabama, Moore moved to Mississippi for a short time and then took the voyage back across the Atlantic to be an English professor in France.

Though little is known about the actual legal practice of Mr. Moore in Alabama and observers of history can speculate as to why he decided to leave Alabama, the South, and the United States altogether; he offered a unique contribution to Black history in the United States.

In the face of great uncertainty and danger, Moses Moore did what none before him had done in becoming the first African-American Attorney in Alabama and for that all Alabamians owe him our admiration and thanks.

DISCLAIMER: The above blog post is just advice, and you will be better served to call David S. Clark with your bankruptcy questions. This blog contains helpful tips and advice, but is not professional legal advice, and shouldn’t treated as such.