If anyone wants to be shocked by rent amounts, check out NYC. Thank god our apartment is rent stabilized, which means the housing authority determines the % increase allowed each year. We pay just under $1800/month for a 1400 sq ft 2-bedroom. It's a very large apartment for Brooklyn, and is also considered a good deal at that price. It's really hard to find any decent 2-bedroom for under $2000/month here.
@DisneyMandC I think you're right about student loan interest. I graduated in 2003 and the interest on my loans was between 2-3%. My total amount was also less than $20K, and my payment was $125/month from the time I graduated until I paid it off at the end of last year. I can't imagine paying over $1000/month in loan payments, especially right after graduation. Yikes!
I've been doing focus groups for years through a few different companies in my area, and its not creepy at all. They are usually held in an office building or conference room at a hotel, and its a group of people all meeting together so you aren't like, alone in a room with the administrator or anything. For the ones I've done, you go to the building, sign in with a receptionist, and they usually have beverages & snacks available for you while you wait. Its all very professional and nothing to be concerned about going to alone.
Back to debt dumping... I think I am going to go ahead and pay off (or at least pay down by half) my last CC. I have most of the money set aside from my property sale, and I was going to just keep that in an account until the 0% interest promotion on the card is up next year and try to pay down the card with regular funds, but I think having that card nearly maxed out is affecting my credit score. I wanted to apply for a new credit card (for a sign-up bonus) so I checked my score with CapitalOne's Credit Tracker tool, and its lower than I thought it was. Its still over 700, so not bad, but I used the feature on the credit tracker to run different scenarios and it estimated that if I pay off that card my score will go up by over 80 points. I liked the idea of keeping that money as a temporary emergency fund while I built up more savings but I have another about $2500 as a true emergency fund. I could also take the $100/month that I pay toward the card and redirect it to the EF. Maybe I will pay off half the balance on the card with the savings and keep half as emergency $. Its so hard to decide, parting with large sums of money (even if it is to pay off debt) makes me nervous.