#Rockville Credit audit company
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creditprocenter-blog · 6 years ago
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Credit Audit Company Rockville MD
If you are searching for professional help in repairing your credit report we applaud you. It is always wise to seek out professionals and for something that is as important and influential as your credit score, it can be a very wise decision.
Before you go out and hire a credit audit company Rockville MD it is important to understand a little bit about the process and how to find the best company for your needs. It is true that you can repair your credit yourself and do not need to hire anyone but at the expense of headaches, time, frustration...
Keep the following things in mind
-Monthly Billing: You should avoid paying hourly billing because this will quickly add up into a much more expensive credit repair bill than necessary. Instead look for a monthly payment of under $100. You can typically expect to spend about 8 months using a service and can pay as low as $50 per month with some services.Customer Support: How much customers support are you given? Are there any fees or charges for calling and finding out the status of your case? You should be given free customer service and unlimited access to this.
Credit Attorney: It is important for your service to have licensed expert credit lawyers on their staff. This is because they are going to be knowledgeable of the constantly evolving consumer credit laws and know how to use these to your best benefit.
Hire our credit audit company for all your problems. We help you achieve the best results.
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madrabbitsociety · 4 years ago
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Just thinking about that post from earlier about how arts stuff shouldn’t have been turned into make money stuff. Because that mindset has killed so many hobbies for me, honestly. I mean, don’t get me wrong, maybe one day I’ll finally write something original and put it up on Smashwords or something, but probably not. 
A few years ago I had an audition for a dream job- don’t laugh, it was at a Renn Faire. I told my then-employer two months before the audition that I would be trying out for it and everything seemed perfectly normal. I gave him all the details and specs, and as I was a hairdresser working solely off commission I had some flexibility with my schedule. Well, the week of the audition I got a call from another theater company. It’s a community theater company, I’d auditioned for their production of Sherlock’s Veiled Secret and - the director stresses this to this day- VERY NARROWLY lost the role of Irene Adler, but their hairdresser dropped out and they needed help, would I come down? I had literally nothing on my books and walk-ins during the spring were scarce, so I asked my boss if I could leave a little early during tech week so I could be available during the show? I knew that if I proved I was willing to do other things, they’d work with me again.
He flipped the fuck out. 
Essentially his argument boiled down to ‘You can’t do hair and have other things in your life’. Which confused me, because he didn’t give married stylists or stylists with kids trouble when they wanted to leave early. It was only me- I had to be as dedicated to his salon as he was. I told him to fuck off. (OK, that’s a lie, I showed up to work one day, took down my license and left while he wasn’t there because I’m a fucking coward but what’re you gonna do?)
Sherlock happened the same weekend as the Ren Faire, and my car broke down, and I did something fucking stupid- I rented a vehicle. On a credit card. Because in my brain, if I missed the audition for the Faire I knew they wouldn’t see me next year (I know that when you first audition for a new company you rarely get cast, you gotta work your way in) and if I couldn’t help with Sherlock the same thing would probably happen with that company as well. 
See, here’s the thing, though. I didn’t drive until a few years ago and I was terrified of driving on highways- I wouldn’t even drive on highways near my house. And I was also terrified of giant vehicles- I had a tiny Ford Focus and I refused to drive my mom’s SUV. So here I was, shaking and screaming down 270 near DC to get to Annapolis and then to Rockville in Maryland (BIG stupid highway, in a RENTED SUV) all because I didn’t want to miss this opportunity to work for free with the theater. I had no money, I had no job, and I messed up my audition time so I didn’t get cast anyway although they still saw me, which I thought was really sweet of them. 
But that taught me a lot about what’s important to me as a person, I think. That weekend, on a hideously windy day, I got to perform the ‘What a piece of work is man’ speech from Hamlet on a replica of the Globe stage while all the stylists were still in the salon with that overbearing weirdo. And the next day, Sunday, when I showed up to do hair and run props for Sherlock’s Veiled Secret, I walked into a room full of absolute strangers and the director cried out, “Meghan’s here! We love Meghan!” 
When I said I wanted to volunteer my time, the first thing the salon manager and the salon owner asked was, “Why? Are they paying you? Why go there if they’re not paying you?” 
And over the last two years working with that company and those people, volunteering my time, I’ve built a really sweet connection. They know I’m miserable at my job, so they send me job opportunities in theater and other places as they pop up. They know I’m facing a tenuous living situation so every time they see a studio or a roommate situation closer to the theater that’s in my range, they forward me the listing. They send me Gritty memes when I had a relative pass away this week. And they were bugging me yesterday about auditioning for a virtual production of She Kills Monsters, which is why I’m on here trying to find a contemporary dramatic monologue because I can’t use ‘What a piece of work is man’. :-P  
It would be nice to earn money to write or to act. That’d be pretty fucking cool, I would never lie about that. But the things I get for volunteering my time, that’s a different kind of currency that’s much more important to me because it’s so scarce to find those type of loving connections in this world. I can’t WAIT to do ‘Shakespeare in the Wood’ this spring with my friends from A Taste for Murder- I’ll be playing Viola from Twelfth Night, and the sweet angel from my Pandemic Theater post is going to be my Olivia. And it’s really fricking cool. 
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