LisaR
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- Joined
- Sep 26, 2000
- Messages
- 9,935
Then maybe it would help for you to go post in the "class of 2015" thread so they can start turning down their dimmer switches. If any of us didn't get started 2 years ago as you suggest, what did you hope to accomplish by posting the suggestion now?
I don't see a single poster hovering and controlling in an unreasonable overbearing fashion. The truth is that the ones who can't cut the apron strings probably didn't pack up their kids and take them off to school at all like the posters here di, but encouraged their kids to stay closer to home.
Kudos to everyone working through this big change in life, encouraging your kids to spread their wings. Even if it means they ask our opinion from time to time.
Like the mom in our neighborhood who went on the HIGH SCHOOL bus this week and yelled at the kids because someone took her son's DS? I'm thinking it might be time for her to step back a bit.

Well, it has been an interesting and stressful 24 hours.
My DS called yesterday because he was trying to make a payment with his debit card to the university to replace his lost ID cardheadache
. The payment came back rejected. He then tried to do an eCheck, which went through. So he went on his online banking to see if the eCheck went through, when he noticed that his checking account had a zero balance, and there were 4 charges to the USPS.com listed. His debit card had been hacked!!
I called the credit union, and indeed, the four charges were there, plus five more pending, all made on Wednesday, and totaling over $200. They wiped out his checking and overdraft protection kicked in, along with $15 in fees.
They immediately canceled his card, and instructed me that my DS had to call the USPS. He was a MESS. He called the number, but couldn't get through to a human. The whole time, he is outside in the rain because no cell phones get service in the dorm due to concrete block walls. And his landline is incoming only (outgoing only on campus).
I called USPS for him then, spoke to a person, and she was a real gem. (that is not complimentary). Anyway, she instructed me to call the credit union to file dispute paperwork.
I went into the CU today, and they wouldn't let me file the paperwork on his behalf because although my name is on his accounts, it is not on his debit card. I have the paperwork and will drive it down to him on Tuesday for him to sign it.
In the meantime, he had no money, and was going to spend the weekend with his girlfriend this weekend at her college. The CU on campus (not ours) would not cash a check for him. Luckily, there is a branch of our CU not far from campus so his friend was able to stop there for him to withdraw money before they left today.
He was SO upset when he discovered he had been hacked. This is not something I could prepare him for, or at least I never thought to. It has happened to DH and I with our Visa card before, and I know how violating it feels.
I'm telling you, this kid has been having an "education" this semester!!
Oh no! Your poor son. Yep, the "education" they get with this experience is all encompassing, isn't it?

Oh no Marcy! What an awful lesson to get so soon after getting out on his own. That's awful!
Tell him to take some breaths..... and embrace his own inner Dory..... and just keep swimming. This too shall pass.
Seriously though..... someone hacked his card....... and used it at the post office?
But then I had the world's worst credit card thief a few years ago. I drove off from the Burger King drive through without my card. When I called the next day after figuring out where it was, they had it for me in the manager's office. But I'm glad I had checked my account online. It had been on a spin around town, stopping at a Sonic, another Burger King and a grocery store for M & M's and whipped topping. Really? They could have done so much better.I got the surveillance tape from the grocery store and it was one of the employees at the first BK. Nice, huh?
This is typical of credit card fraud; buying a bunch of little things. Nobody will ask them for ID when the charges are kept low. If they only use it around town, it will likely remain as small purchases. If they go online, look out!