This Dizzer board is not the place to post this question. First, the folks here might be happy when it comes to the Happiest Place on Earth but many (as you can already see) are judgemental, opinionated, and likely tospew out info on things they are not familiar with. I'd find an internet forum hosted by experts on debt and financing and post there.
I have a relative who racked up huge CC bills and years and years of unpaid back taxes. He hired a company to help and paid PENNIES on the dollar of what he owed, including the fed and state taxes. In the end, he made out MUCH better than the rest of us who do the right thing and pay on time. You dug yourself into a hole, I would pull whatever strings and loopholes I could to get out of it if I were you. Good luck and ignore the haters up here.
6. CCCS would only reduce our min payments by 50$ in total. (Ex only: we send 300 a month in min payment... they would reduce it to 250 a month... not 50$ off each bill.)
This Dizzer board is not the place to post this question. First, the folks here might be happy when it comes to the Happiest Place on Earth but many (as you can already see) are judgemental, opinionated, and likely tospew out info on things they are not familiar with.
You are woman of sound mind and body -- working age. To tell you the truth, this credit card thing you have going on is your immediate problem, but it isn't even your biggest problem.
Long term. You are not saving anything for retirement and you are not doing anything to earn a Social Security benefit of any sort. Politics aside, you are not married to your partner. You will not get spousal benefits from Social Security.
You have got to get going here girl - I'm not kidding.
I think that instead of running around the bag of junk you should set up a delivery service of people that want to mail boxes to themselves. You don't want a real hard working job and this would have you out and interacting with DISers on at WDW.
I really like the "Disney errand person" idea. Especially with so many people using ME they could use someone local who could make a trip to Publix or CVS for them. You could call it "Thanks, Sandra!" and advertise here.

No, no, no. They cannot go back to the cozy way they were living. That is what got them into this mess to begin with.
The OP is famous for her "I realized that working was not my thing". She also will tell the SO how many hours she has to work to pay their bills. A 20 something may not like to work but still may need to work. The OP needs to work. IIRC she once stated they live on $20K to maybe $25K per year. The only way to pay that stuff off is to get a job.
The OP is not even applying for jobs, she has no desire to get a job. That's why everyone is saying get a job.
BKY - stays on your credit 7-10 years and now getting credit the first 3 years after filing...dicey at best.
Lauri
Apparently WDW IS hiring parttime help - because a friend of mine has an interview soon.
Sorry, but I don't keep a notebook full of previous posters life histories. I had no idea about her previous history, nor do I really care. Regardless if she wants a job or not doesn't change the fact that it isn't EASY to GET a job nowadays.
Amen!Can I get an "amen"?
Financial planning is cruicial for anyone, but it's especially critical for same gender partners as they don't get all the legal/financial protections as marriage offers. Do either of you have life insurance? medical insurance? disability insurance? power of attorney? advance medical directives? a will? While your immediate problem is credit card debt and of course is your 1st priority, usually when people let the debt get out of control, they aren't making other sound financial choices either, and that can and will have long term consequences.
If you have all of that in place already, great. If not you need to start thinking about it, and getting as much in place as possible as soon as you are able to. Take life insurance for example, you are depending on your partner's income, but heaven forbid, what if she dies sudenly? Without life insurance you'll have zero income and without a will, you aren't entitled to inherit any of her assets (if she has any). If she becomes disabled, without disability insurance you're without any income, without medical insurace her medical bills will stack up and she may not be able to get the treatment she needs, without power of attorney and/or advance medical directives, her family (not you!) gets to decide her treatment if she isn't competant, heck you may have to beg them for visiting time if they don't approve of you or your lifestyle, as they have the right to keep you away from her...the dominos don't end on this.
And as RitaE pointed out, you need to make sure you take care of YOU, too. That means working enough to qualify for SS benifits (not just retirement, but disability too) and saving for your own retirement. Do you want to spend your retirement living hand to mouth? Because without retirement savings, that's what it will be like to only have SS money in your golden years.
I'm sorry if it seems like we're all jumping on you, but for most of the posters, it's because we genuinely don't want to see a fellow diser make huge mistakes that have very big and very long term consequences.
Whatever choice(s) you make, I do wish you luck.
I would double check that. I have a cousin who works for Disney and I just called her. The entire Disney Corp. has a mandatory hiring freeze until further notice. She even tried to get my other relative in a few months back and couldn't.

Sorry, but I don't keep a notebook full of previous posters life histories. I had no idea about her previous history, nor do I really care. Regardless if she wants a job or not doesn't change the fact that it isn't EASY to GET a job nowadays.
That's all really good Sandra but to be honest.
You cannot coupon your way out of a no income situation. CCCS told you that you needed to increase your income - because you have no income. You can't pay any money ... until you have money. Your problem isn't that you eat too much. Or that you spend too much on your mac and cheese dinners.
You are woman of sound mind and body -- working age. To tell you the truth, this credit card thing you have going on is your immediate problem, but it isn't even your biggest problem.
Long term. You are not saving anything for retirement and you are not doing anything to earn a Social Security benefit of any sort. Politics aside, you are not married to your partner. You will not get spousal benefits from Social Security.
You have got to get going here girl - I'm not kidding.
Spending on credit cards got them into the mess. Not just having one person at home and one person working. If having the OP home works for them, then why do they need to change that, once they get everything paid off, with all credit cards closed? They might still have a very low income, but without all those payments they'll be in a MUCH better place than they are now. They'll be able to live a cash lifestyle and it will be better.
Plus, it's probably far LESS motivating to think "I'll have to do this forever" than to think of it as a short term plan.
I didn't have my handy dandy notebook with me today, but it was mentioned multiple times in this thread that this poster is well known around these parts for not wanting a job. Point taken that getting a job is much harder now than it used to be, I agree with you there. However, not looking for a job makes it infinitely harder to ever get one. That seems to be the missing piece in this case.
It is hard to forget a person who states that work is not her thing. No need for a notebook.
She lost her job may moons ago when it would have been easier to get a job. But she did not want one and did not apply.
Now the economy is worse, but there is the TRU that I mentioned, and it is harder to get a job.
If she lost her job last week I would completely agree with you but the is not the case.