Last updated on October 2, 2021

Dramatic and life-altering events take place in our lives, and people around us go on with their routines like nothing had happened. Neighbors came back from work, kids were playing outside while we were gasping for air, desperately trying to find a solution out of our dilemma.
Our story is just one of many. We are not special, yet we felt singled out. Why was this happening to us?
August, 2009: My husband had just had been informed that his largest client, who had kept him and his employees busy for years, had closed the doors after their largest customer didn’t pay the last invoices. It’s like a small snowball in the alps starts rolling downhill from the top. What at first seems insignificant, becomes bigger and bigger, and when it finally hits you, it’s not a small ball anymore but an avalanche. It knocks you off your feet, it seems to swallow you completely, it buries you under its weight.
My husband’s company, his pride and joy for 10 years, went belly up with one call- we just didn’t know it yet. He and his employees had just come back a few days earlier after they had finished a big project. Four weeks out of town at a military base. He had been so proud of the job, had shown me the blueprints numerous times. He had talked about it for days and weeks before it started. Now the dream project had turned into a nightmare. We had bills to pay, most importantly, around ten employees and their families depended on our checks, just like we depended on the check for the completed work.
We had to make a decision. Either we would tell our employees we couldn’t pay them for the last three weeks of work, and keep the money in our account for us and our bills, or we would pay our employees, which would empty our account and the savings.
We played all the scenarios in our head, and in the end, it was a no-brainer. Paying the employees was not just the right thing to do, it was also the logical thing to do. Surely, soon would be busy again, and without employees, we didn’t even stand a chance. After all, it was only the two of us and four dogs. Our employees on the other hand had kids and families who depended on them. And so we wrote and signed the checks, and paid all the invoices that were due for the business. We even paid the rent for the warehouse space, so were ready for all future projects.
We really believed this was just a temporary setback. Somehow, we would find a way to keep ourselves afloat. I had just quit my job as a translator a year before and now worked part-time for my husband, who kept me busy with payroll, taxes, invoices, and all the other things that were needed in his small company. My husband had become my boss, which amused me endlessly. “I always wanted to sleep with the boss,” I joked at get-togethers. I had started my furniture restoration business in our garage, but when the recession started and the economy went down, people were busy surviving. My service was not needed at that time. There was no money coming in from my side either.
We were confident and started calling all the businesses my husband and his crew had worked for in the past. Surely there was work -somewhere. When one is willing, there is always work. We were willing to outbid everybody, were willing to take a small loss -if necessary. Anything! Everything! There had to be a way out.
We found projects and won the bids, but all of them were months away -too long for us. We survived another three months, then one afternoon we sat in the living room surrounded by all the past due bills. We had already sold the stamp collection. A stamp dealer had taken advantage of me. I must have shown my desperation because he only paid me 1K for a collection that was worth five times the amount. I had taken the offer. We needed the gas money to be able to look for work, we needed dog food and groceries.
We were three months behind with our mortgage payments and car payments. Things got real, very fast. I tried to land a job as a translator or interpreter and had no luck. Nobody was hiring. The recession was in full swing and we were right in the middle of it.
Why us? We always came back to the same question? We didn’t deserve that. I suppose nobody ever does. It just doesn’t help. If you didn’t do anything wrong, why does it feel like you did?
There was no work available in our area. My husband couldn’t file for unemployment and I didn’t, because the thought never crossed my mind. I had never relied on government help in my life, why would I now?
That afternoon we finally faced reality. We would lose the house, and we had nowhere to go. There was no money left to empty out our home or store our furniture either.
We looked at our dogs, “our babies” and made a promise to each other. We would do what we could to keep them. After all, we were family. Three big rescue dogs and an ankle biter, who was from a litter of puppies my best friend’s dogs had given birth to.
I called her that afternoon, asked her if we could park “the ankle biter” who we loved dearly at her house for a few months. A few hours later she came by with a few bottles of wine, we sat down and talked.
She had problems herself. While still employed at an oil company, she had put all her savings and part of her retirement money into her dream. She had invested 40K in a building with a dream kitchen on her property, at the worst time ever. She wanted to open a sausage kitchen, producing homemade Cajun-style sausages, and smoked meats she had grown up with.
The kitchen full of equipment was empty. The freezers were full of meat. One of her neighbors, a young man who had sounded so promising, the cook she thought would be able to make all her dreams come true, didn’t know what he was doing.
At the end of the day, we had come up with a plan. My husband and I would separate temporarily. Our dogs and I would move in with my friend, and my husband would leave and look for work out of state, living with his brother in the meantime.
There was no work available where we lived, surely it would be different in a bigger city, in a different state.
And so he left two days later, a truck full of tools and “stuff”. A flat-screen TV, clothes, comforter, and pillows and everything else he would need to start all over new. In just a few weeks I would follow with the dogs and we would start a new life…somewhere.
So we thought…

It’s always difficult to know when something is going to be a temporary setback or completely upend your life. Like you said, a lot of people went through it hard during those times. I was pretty young then, I didn’t have much built up so I was able to float through pretty well unscathed. I guess I’m making payment for that now. Things will turn around though. They always do, right?
Things will turn around if you want it to happen. While much might seem out of your control right now. You have a choice. Forward or backward. It’s really that simple.
Things will turn around if you want it to happen. While much might seem out of your control right now. You have a choice. Forward or backward. It’s really that simple and not simple at all.
It’s overwhelming and depressing. Life is so unfair to so many of us. The truth is. We both are lucky that someone took us in.
So many businesses that shut down choose not to pay their staff.. good of you to look out for their families when you were struggling so.
Your opening paragraph is exactly as I felt back in the early 80s. I lost my home when the wage earner/father/husband left me with five dependent children. It was a terrifying experience! And you’re right that everyone else’s lives went on as usual. I’m forever grateful for those who reached out in support of my getting out of that situation.
I guess that all we can do, being grateful and paying it forward for the rest of our lives. I am sorry you husband left you with so many children. I hope he paid hefty on child support.
Thanks! Like you, I wanted to write and share to encourage others. No child support. We’re just learning what a ‘narcissist’ is.
What an awful time to have lived through. I commend you for opting to pay your staff. I totally identify with your opening paragraph – like living in a bubble
While it was indeed awful, it also turned out to be a special time.
I’m sure you made it so
That or I live in the ditch with a laptop 🙂
Two things you said stand out in particular to me, Bridget. The “snowball effect” as one thing triggers an avalanche of additional consequences. and the recognition as you sat and looked at the accumulating bills and “it got real fast!” Your willingness to do anything to forestall what turned out to be inevitable, and knowing you’d done nothing to bring this on yourselves, must have been crushing. Of course it was! I am not surprised it’s taken this long to share about it. and I’m glad you are willing.
I really fear that many will have to ‘go down’ that road the same way and if I reach just one, and can give them a glimpse of hope, then it was all worth it.
Thank you for reading my story.
Bridget, I am sorry that you and your husband are facing such a devastating time. Hold onto hope and find your inner strength to see you through <3
It happened 2009, during the last recession. I am writing now about it, because it will happen to many again.
Thanks for the clarification. I haven’t been on your blog for quite a while.
No problem. I am glad you stopped by today. I missed seeing you and I hope you are alright.
I was busy working on self-publishing my second novel.
OH, how wonderful. Good luck!
Oh no 😢 I wish this was fiction. For some reason the part that hit me hardest is you getting ripped off on your stamp collection…
Looking back it hurts more than it did back then. In the end the 1000 dollars I got for it, helped us for a while. I suppose it’s normal. A lot of people take advantage of you any change they get.
A sad reality that there are a lot of greedy folks out there. 😔
I am so sorry. This sounds terrifying. You do write in a compelling and effectively. I want to read the next chapter!
It is quite a trip back on memory lane. There is more to come, it was (is) quite a journey.
This is really gripping Bridget, but so sad when I remember that it was real, and devastating. The avalanche analogy is so apt in that you could do nothing to influence the events, only try to survive!
It got very real, very fast, even though it felt surreal at times.