taymaesmom,
I agree with the others that knowing more about your debt would help us provide relevant advice, and I'd go one step further in saying that any financial information you are willing to provide would make the advice that much better. My advice to someone with limited career maneuver room, minimal savings, no investments, and lots of credit card debt is going to be very different from the advice I'd give to someone who can work anywhere, has an emergency fund already, and only debt is a mortgage.
Any of the following information you'd be willing to share would be helpful: what kind of debt do you have? Is it high interest rate (>10%) or low interest rate (<5%)? Do you think you can get another job with benefits easily, or will it take a few months? Do you already have savings, and if so how many months of living expenses could it cover? Do you have other investments? How much can you use each month for savings/debt payment? What are your monthly living expenses?
I'll tell a story and then tell you my advice without knowing the answers to those questions. First, the story: The first house I bought was a short sale from a guy who thought this house was his dream house - he was going to die there. He bought the house at the height of the market in 2007 and paid ~$360,000 with 0% down, so a mortgage of ~$360,000. When the market crashed, he was okay for awhile. He had a good job and plenty of savings. Then in 2010 he lost his job and he made what I think was the worst decision he could have made. He decided to take all of his savings (~$140,000) and put it towards his house. The problem was, prepaying principle on your mortgage doesn't mean you stop getting mortgage statements each month, it just means you will pay it off earlier. So now he had no job, no savings, and he still had his mortgage and other expenses. Long story not-so-short, he racked up massive debt trying to keep his head above water but eventually lost the battle. If he had simply lived off his savings he would have had plenty of money while looking for a new job. Very sad story.
So without knowing more about your situation, I'd do the following.
1. If you are contributing to retirement accounts, change your contributions so you are only contributing enough to get the match. No match, no contributions for the time being. Just MAKE SURE you restart when this is over

2. Go over your budget with a fine tooth comb and stop spending on unnecessary items. You can always restart cable and clothes shopping when you are certain your jobs are secure.
3. Put your excess money into an emergency fund until you achieve 4-8 months of living expenses (2 months each for you and DH, plus more if you have children at home)
4. Once you have a solid emergency fund, if you have credit card or other high interest consumer debt you should pay that off. If you don't have high interest or consumer debt, I'd start/restart retirement accounts.
Hope that helps! Sorry for the long post
