Los Angeles Times

Loan to relative goes bad

- Email Amy Dickinson at askamy@amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: I lent money to a young relative to buy a used truck. His mother thought that because he didn’t have any credit record, he would learn to make payments on a regular basis by paying me, in addition to having a vehicle he needed for his job. We signed an agreement, which specified how much he would pay and how many payments he would make.

He made the first few payments but then stopped paying altogether. I have tried to get in touch by phone, email and paper mail, with no results. I left messages that expressed concern, not anger, asking that he please contact me to discuss the situation.

He hasn’t lost his job. His mother knows he stopped paying but doesn’t know how many payments he has missed. I don’t want to cause a scene at a family event where he might be present. Perplexed

Dear Perplexed: There will be no scenes at family events, because your young relative will not show up at any events he suspects you will also attend.

That’s the problem with lending money to friends or relatives; it creates problems when the money is not repaid. This young scofflaw will ghost you rather than face a fairly straightfo­rward problem in a mature way.

At this point, you might start by asking a lawyer to send a friendly letter on your behalf. Include a copy of the promissory note and ask this young man to contact you to arrange for repayment on a new schedule. Otherwise, he could face you in small-claims court.

Dear Amy: There’s a guy who likes me. I am interested in him too, but here’s my dilemma: We are of different ethnicitie­s (I’m white). This is not an issue for me, but he has strong beliefs in the “Black Lives Matter” movement. In the city where we live he hangs mainly with residents who are mostly (their words) brown and black people.

I am already trying to figure out where I fit in. Some people have embraced me, while others play the reverse racism card. How do I know what he feels for me is genuine when he espouses views that openly favor people of color?

I am open to his invitation for us to get to know each other, but I am mindful of the backlash. I don’t want to face racial prejudice. How can I even attempt to have this conversati­on with him? Should I? Wondering

Dear Wondering: You state that your race doesn’t matter to you, and yet it does. Of course it does.

Black lives do matter. It would be hard to argue with this true statement about the value of human life and the importance of acknowledg­ing the reality and challenges of contempora­ry life for people of color.

If this man and his friends are racist, then you aren’t going to want to hang out with them. But if they are trying to explain themselves and their view of the world, then this might be an eye-opening and potentiall­y life-changing experience for you.

You can have this experience only by diving in and having it. Talking about race is important. You could start by asking this guy to explain how he feels about people who don’t have his skin tone. Does he have white friends other than you? Do you have black friends other than him? You may find parallels between your experience­s.

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