I really didn't look at Lisa's confrontation with Jean, in the salon, as a temper tantrum or anything ugly--uncomfortable--definitely--but she didn't get nasty. I simply thought of it as another 'withdrawal' symptom from her addiction to spending. I thought Jean made her point clear--get your hair done, but it is coming out of your allowance. Personally, I can't relate to the hair thing, I spend zip for salons, but that suits my job(I wear my hair up, I work in an historical house, most of the time my hair is under a cap--never a bad hair day

) so Lisa has made her decision, just wondering what she plans to cut out in order to get the hair done

so perhaps she'll find a way to budget it in--
As for the cars, I think that just because the BMW wasn't mentioned by name, doesn't mean it has made the cut-
I find all the folks involved personable, just having a tough time with their spending addictions, which is to be expected-
Sorry, still don't see why the family is snubbing them. One of my BILs has this problem(though nowhere near this dimension!) & we would not think of cutting them. Yep, it is mega frustrating at times, but we are here for them--with anything but $$ or a co-sign
& they have never asked for either. I do know that in my family member's state, if my relative was to divorce she'd still be saddled with the spendthrift's debts, even though he makes far more $$ than she does. she loves him, but hopes she dies first

I'm not kidding, it's what she's said--
Can't see how both families managed to get by without being foreclosed upon, or how they obtain credit. both should have declared bankruptcy before the laws changed. How can they even raise their FICO scores? why didn't all their debts show up in their credit reports?
Jean