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Should You Ever Lend to a Friend?
![]() Question: A good friend of mine is in a tight spot financially. I'd like to help her out, but I'm worried that lending her money might sour our friendship. Do you have any recommendations on how we can arrange a loan?
Suze: Adding money issues to a friendship can result in an explosive situation, so I'm glad you wrote before you acted. The first thing you need to do is determine why your friend is having financial problems. Is this a temporary state, or does she always seem to be struggling? If financial panic is a recurring theme in her life, you need to understand that in most cases the problem runs deeper than a lack of funds. Sometimes people overspend to assuage feelings of inferiority or inadequacy. Or they run up debts trying to find happiness through expensive possessions. Others are never inclined to set aside money for unexpected expenses and are consistently flattened by them. Unaware of the true reason for their financial irresponsibility, people like this usually have difficulty changing their fiscal habits. If your friend is always experiencing financial problems, any money you give her will just serve as a Band-Aid, and sooner or later she will find herself in dire straits again because that is where she feels comfortable. It's the place that, for now, defines her. Under these circumstances, I'd advise against helping her. The money will get in the way of your friendship: You'll begin to resent that she isn't paying you back; she'll feel indebted and guilty when she sees you. If financial woes are unusual for your friend, ask yourself some additional questions:
From the August 2001 issue of O, The Oprah Magazine
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