Los Angeles Times

Suggest credit counseling

- Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to ask amy@ amydickins­on. com

Dear Amy: A few years ago, a not- so- distant relative, 35 years old, asked for $ 3,000 to help with credit card debt. She asked me not to tell anyone, especially her mother.

This was supposedly a one- time plea for help with a promise to pay the money back within the year.

She did pay it back ( in 18 months).

A year later she asked for $ 5,000 — same scenario.

A year later, she repaid me $ 1,500 and asked for more time to pay the rest.

I forgave the loan with the strong suggestion that she seek f inancial counseling and not ask to borrow again.

She has a decent job, but I think she’s a very poor money manager.

A month ago, she asked for $ 7,000.

I have not yet responded to her, and I don’t want to.

Am I wrong to ignore her? I think her mother has helped her in the past but doesn’t have the means now. Should I notify her?

Distressed

Dear Distressed: Your generous choice to bail out your relative seems to have been helpful in the short term but may have simply kicked her financial problem down the road, delaying by years the need for her to face the rational consequenc­es of her money habits.

I don’t quibble with your choice to forgive the more recent loan, as long as you don’t lend further.

It might be easier for you to ignore than to face this most recent request, but this is an opportunit­y for you to deliver your answer in a loving ( and possibly helpful) way. A simple statement: “I’m worried about you. I believe you need responsibl­e financial advice. Debtors Anonymous might be able to help.” If this does not appeal to your relative, there are other credit counseling groups.

If you think it would ultimately help your adult family member, you should disclose this lending activity to her mother.

Dear Amy: In 1956, my mother had a f ling with a married airman. Nine months later, I arrived.

Within a few months of my birth there were court proceeding­s and he paid my mother $ 2,500 with the agreement that she not contact him again. We didn’t.

Mom died in 1990, so I thought I would contact my biological father. We correspond­ed twice that year. Both times he was cordial, but he never acknowledg­ed his part of my existence. He did acknowledg­e that he knew my mother. His last words to me were, “I live a nice quiet life here.”

Through online research, I’ve learned that he was married in 1955 and had children. His wife died in 2010 and he died in 2012. We never met.

This is my dilemma: In his obit, it said, “He had a long struggle with cancer.”

I need to know what cancer he had. I have a condition that could turn cancerous. Should I contact his family to ask? I’m pretty sure they know nothing about me.

Related

Dear Related: Yes, you should contact the family. When you do so, you should make sure to convey that you are seeking medical informatio­n that could have a real impact on your life and health. Tell them you and your biological father correspond­ed briefly 30 years ago but never met in person.

If there are court records of the arrangemen­t between him and your mother, it would be helpful for you to have copies, in case they have questions.

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