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Monday, April 27, 2009
Allen Hunt :: Townhall.com Columnist
Bankruptcy of Hope
by Allen Hunt
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Three times in the same week! I had to rub my eyes in disbelief. Bankruptcies keep piling up. On three separate occasions in the past week, bankruptcies became front of mind. Not financial bankruptcies but bankruptcies of hope. Real life situations where the hope reserves ran out and there was no FHIC (Federal Hope Insurance Commission) waiting to make good on the overdrafted account. Real life situations where a good person became confused into thinking that money really does make the world go around.

At lunch on Monday, a friend, David, shared that he was headed out of town for a cousin's funeral. The cousin had recently lost his job and primary source of income. As a result, he had lost custody of the foster children he and his wife were caring for. A few days later, the wife found the man in the garage, with the car running, in an apparent suicide. A permanent solution to a temporary problem. A bankruptcy of hope.

Early Wednesday morning, Freddie Mac's acting chief financial officer, David Kellerman, apparently ended his own life by hanging himself on an exercise machine in his basement in suburban Washington, D.C. As acting CFO, Kellerman surely found himself in a pressure cooker situation, managing a staff of about 500 and being ultimately responsible for the company's financial controls and reporting. Kellerman, 41, had been with Freddie Mac for over 16 years, and left behind a wife and young daughter. A bankruptcy of hope.

Finally, I learned of a friend, Keith, who had secured a second mortgage on his home to maintain the family's lifestyle in a struggling economy and a challenging business situation. The added debt only made matters worse, as did the fact that he failed to share the family's worsening predicament with his wife. On Friday, he succumbed to the pressure and walked out. He packed a few things, dropped the keys on the kitchen counter, and left the family with a note that he was headed to Alaska and would not be back. Bankruptcy of hope.

How do you get to a situation in your own mind where the BEST solution is suicide or abandoning the family altogether? Again, these are permanent solutions to temporary problems. And poor solutions at that.

How do you prevent filing for a bankruptcy of hope? How do you keep your spirits strong even when the stock market tanks or your business collapses? My years as a pastor, and my own life experiences, have taught me three things to do to prevent ever arriving at a moment that dark.

First, find your purpose in life. Most Americans define themselves by what they have or what they do. That is dangerous territory to inhabit. Your life is not defined by what you own, possess, or have. Nor is your life best defined by what you do for a living, whether lawyer, athlete, or auto mechanic.

A part of you craves meaning and purpose. Listen to that voice within your soul. Tune out the voices around you that insist you buy more, consume more, borrow more, and own more. The more you possess, the more you will worry about it. The more time you will invest in caring for your stuff, and the more energy you will spend in insuring it and maintaining it. Your life consists of far more than the possessions you pile up. Simplicity is your friend not your enemy. Continued...

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About The Author
Allen Hunt is the host of the natioanlly syndicated talk radio program, the Allen Hunt show.
 
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Wendy/Ms Kelly
Perhaps I've become jaded, well, OK more jaded than ever, but there's plenty of evidence that Americans do not want to "take responsibility for their own survival, success, and families." My experience is that a sizeable number of folks want to shove their responsibilities off on government, other people including wives, husbands, parents, employers, etc.... The prospect of getting something for nothing has supplanted the desire for work and independence. Isn't that the mentality that produced our dear leader...Obama? Americans fell for the rhetoric lock, stock and barrel.

A great article
These times are tough, but I believe they are going to get much worse, which means we are going to need each other more and more. This, I believe, is what Almighty God has wanted for us all along, to love one another and care about one another. I think that we all need to start looking at our country's condition from a biblical perspective. Maybe we need to start rethinking our own lives, values, and how we perceive the world around us.
There is Someone who cares about us and loves us, so much that He went to the cross of Calvary and paid our sin debt for us. That is ultimate love, laying down one's life for the sake of another. His name is Jesus Christ, and He showed us all how to be, how to relate with each other. Not even His enemies could deny the things He did. He is Lord. He is Saviour. He is Messiah. And He is coming again to this earth. Soon.
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