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I know the goal of most here is to obtain more credit and better perks, but for me it is the reverse. Although I have been tempted to get more cards and higher lines I have decided to close unneeded accounts and keep my use to a bare minimum. I closed another starter card with a $35 AF and $1K no frills CL today (less than 3 years old). I closed two Cap 1 cards after getting a 10K 15.1% NFCU cash rewards and $5K (now $7K) CSP in January. I also have a small CL freedom, amazon rewards and a senior AMEX gold backdated to 1991 (only 2 years old in real time). I took advantage of the CSP bonus and paid for a trip. I use the freedom for the 5% back and pay it off as soon as I use it. The Amazon is for small amazon.com purchases and gas. AMEX is for backdating and car repairs. NFCU is for bigger expenses. CSP is for dining and travel (may PC or cancel it before one year is up and transfer the credit line to another chase card). I am resisting temptation to overspend again like I have in the past. I'm 54, living on $50K fixed income and have a $115K HELOC to pay for the rest of my life. My credit is maxed, so to speak. I have enough credit to cover emergencies like car repairs and trips to visit family. I might rent a house for myself and my dying mother, so that is where my energies lie at the moment. I have a government-appointed payee to handle my VA check and she's holding $8K in savings that can be used for the move. Getting more credit cards is just not productive. I have had it all and blew it. My 46 late payments, settlements and $115K debt are testimonies to my ill use of credit. Now having gone through gambling addiction treatment (8 months clean now) and continuing with therapy, I am taking advice as to how to handle money. Getting rid of credit cards has been tough, like stopping gambling. They are intertwined. The thrill of getting approved for credit is like hitting the lottery for some, isn't it? Surviving financial disasters and winding up with credit again has been a victory of sorts, but I must move on.
I have been on this forum often since getting the CSP preapproval in December. It has been kind of a replacement for sitting in front of slot machines without losing. I've come out a winner here. I have learned a lot about credit and the folks who use it. Still, I am an addict and need to find something more constructive to do. I'm too old and poor to play the credit game. I hope my experience can be of benefit. I will still be tempted and will wander in and out but life continues to evolve. I'm glad I have some credit but can't be one of the group who has tons of cards and a shiny credit score. My recovery, health and fiscal responsibility are more important than a perk on a high-spend card like CSP was. I'll have to pass on the citi offers and the other cards, at least for today. Thanks to all, especially Nixon and creditaddict. Best wishes.
Each has to do what works for the individual. Never assume that the popularity of a topic on any discussion forum site means that everyone should go along with whatever happens to be the pouplar topic. Popular is just popular and what is best suited to the individual may be entirely different.
Congrats on your for simplfying. I also prefer less cards, and will be paring down to 4 sooner or later.
The goal is not always "more cards and better perks". Although that is a popular mantra here, not everyone wants more more more. As takeshi said, don't rely on the popularity of something on a forum. While it works for some to have 20 cards, for others it's total overkill. It's definitely YMMV. This is also the Internet, where anyone can say whatever they like. Some could say they have certain cards when in fact they do not. So you need to take things with a grain of salt and do what works for you
I'm surprised Nixon of all people was the one who encouraged you to simplify as he is usually one for many cards/bonuses, but whoever did it, I'm glad they helped you out. I'm also glad you are stopping your gambling addiction. That can be so destructive.
analog9, I wish you the best in strength and happiness in your journey. You certainly have your priorities set right in what you are focusing on.
I made a similar statement in another thread but you are correct, apping is absolutely addicting. I have recognized this in myself and will be closing some of my cards in the future when I can do so safely without risking AA or such.
I hope your journey remains sound and peaceful.
@Anonymous wrote:I know the goal of most here is to obtain more credit and better perks, but for me it is the reverse. Although I have been tempted to get more cards and higher lines I have decided to close unneeded accounts and keep my use to a bare minimum. I closed another starter card with a $35 AF and $1K no frills CL today (less than 3 years old). I closed two Cap 1 cards after getting a 10K 15.1% NFCU cash rewards and $5K (now $7K) CSP in January. I also have a small CL freedom, amazon rewards and a senior AMEX gold backdated to 1991 (only 2 years old in real time). I took advantage of the CSP bonus and paid for a trip. I use the freedom for the 5% back and pay it off as soon as I use it. The Amazon is for small amazon.com purchases and gas. AMEX is for backdating and car repairs. NFCU is for bigger expenses. CSP is for dining and travel (may PC or cancel it before one year is up and transfer the credit line to another chase card). I am resisting temptation to overspend again like I have in the past. I'm 54, living on $50K fixed income and have a $115K HELOC to pay for the rest of my life. My credit is maxed, so to speak. I have enough credit to cover emergencies like car repairs and trips to visit family. I might rent a house for myself and my dying mother, so that is where my energies lie at the moment. I have a government-appointed payee to handle my VA check and she's holding $8K in savings that can be used for the move. Getting more credit cards is just not productive. I have had it all and blew it. My 46 late payments, settlements and $115K debt are testimonies to my ill use of credit. Now having gone through gambling addiction treatment (8 months clean now) and continuing with therapy, I am taking advice as to how to handle money. Getting rid of credit cards has been tough, like stopping gambling. They are intertwined. The thrill of getting approved for credit is like hitting the lottery for some, isn't it? Surviving financial disasters and winding up with credit again has been a victory of sorts, but I must move on.
I have been on this forum often since getting the CSP preapproval in December. It has been kind of a replacement for sitting in front of slot machines without losing. I've come out a winner here. I have learned a lot about credit and the folks who use it. Still, I am an addict and need to find something more constructive to do. I'm too old and poor to play the credit game. I hope my experience can be of benefit. I will still be tempted and will wander in and out but life continues to evolve. I'm glad I have some credit but can't be one of the group who has tons of cards and a shiny credit score. My recovery, health and fiscal responsibility are more important than a perk on a high-spend card like CSP was. I'll have to pass on the citi offers and the other cards, at least for today. Thanks to all, especially Nixon and creditaddict. Best wishes.
I think you're doing exactly the right thing. You're closing cards that you don't have a use for anymore. If you think a card isn't good for your lifestyle, you should close it.
Good luck, OP!
Credit addiction and gambling addiction are really very similar. Like I always say, this site hurts some and helps some. Some people can't take this site without falling into a spiral of apping, apping apping and credit becomes like a game to them. Like a slot machine. It's not good or healthy and I'm glad OP realized it.
Hi. Thanks for the responses. As far as those I thanked, I just got a kick out of their inputs. I did get better cards with their help and was able to cancel lesser accounts. They did not encourage me to simplify. Another issue I have is buying things I don't need. I thought about getting a 0% intro interest CC for a clarinet purchase. I don't need it but am fighting the urge to buy it. I will try to resist and stick to my plan. I have cash in the bank to pay for it but could use the money for other things. The 0% int card would give me more flexibility but would go against my post. RESIST!
Good for you man, While I do like quality cards, I have paired a few down myself and now at 6 cards and I feel much better in doing so. I got rid of Barclay, USAA, and a Store card. All three had high limits but with my current ones still over 130K available. Sometimes easier just keep improving the ones you got if it meets your rewards and spending needs.
Well done Analog! I inherited a house in my 30s and decided to install a pool and remodel the whole place. I started out by apping for store cards like HD and Lowes to buy materials under their "no interest, no payments' promotions. When those came due I used 0% and low rate BT cards. When those maxed, I refied my house with the mortgage getting bigger with each refi. Then I took out a HELOC to buy a classic car. The last straw was buying a condo in the boom with no money down. When the bottom dropped out I had no choice but to short sell and file BK My wake up came with BK and the managing credit course I was required to take online. Never realized until that point that all those high CLs and promotional cards can get you in deep without ever realizing until it's too late. Towards the end I was making my HELOC payment with credit cards and my mortgage payment with my retirement.
It scares me sometimes when I read the BK section on how some try for credit during BK and right after. Ready to jump into the fire right away.
Your post took courage and hopefully it will inspire others to be careful about credit..... and remember, you're never too OLD!