Jen Conrad lost her husband last year; this Valentine's Day was a lonely
one. She could have paid more attention, could have told him her
secret, could have, should have, known where she was financially. But
she let him and his law firm handle all the finances. She didn't even
know where the checkbook was. By the end of the story, of course, she
stands on her own, but not without suffering over her own foolishness
and having others take advantage of her.
Stitches, the first
book in the Heritage Art Park series, is a moving account of a Jen
Conrad, middle-aged woman who has to recreate her own life, but first
she has to get past her own privilege and expectations.
It
occurs to me there are several lessons here: 1) know where your money
is, what you have and what you owe; 2) keep some of your own money
separate; 3) get credit in your own name (you'd be surprised how many
women rely on credit cards are tied to their husband/father), and 4) be
aware of everything that happens in your assets. Get educated.
Today's
women have it far better than my generation - beginning to work in the
early seventies meant getting my father's approval to get a credit card.
When I was married in 1980 I had to have my husband co-sign for a card
in my name. Thank God that has changed. But I believe young women today
need to heed the call to keep their own counsel.
To read what happened to Jen, go read Stitches!
Kathy Weyer, Author
Stitches
www.kathyweyer.com
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