Understand your enemy; they say that is

Understand your enemy; they say that is the best way to fight a battle if you hope to win. It is kinda strange to consider a lender your enemy, but when they served you the foreclosure, they ceased being friends. If you know now where their weakness is, you might win at the battle to stop the foreclosure. I know a guy who once stopped foreclosure before the procedure ever even began. Right there while he was still in the room with the bank manager, he told them his collateral was the business he was borrowing money to do. Sounds funny, doesnt it? But I think it worked. He didn’t have a dime of his in it; all he sold was the idea. Yet the bank bought it, and because it eventually worked, he never got foreclosed on; instead he made profit off of it. If you fail to meet all the obligations specified in your deal with a lender, you are in for foreclosure. If it does not come early as you expect, you are only being in luck. I would suggest that you used a chance like that in preparing to stop the procedure once it begins because it will. I thought stopping foreclosure was merely as easy as letting the judge understand how come you failed in your mortgage payments. Actually, it is; except that it is never that straightforward. You have to do it such that the judge can find legal grounds to allow you to keep the property until you can get back on your feet with the payment. If you fail, you lose.
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