Daily Archives: March 13, 2011

John Jay’s Brie Whalen Succeeds On Slopes – Bedford-Katonah, NY Patch

Brie Whalen said there’s something special about individual sports, where achievements rest on just one person—herself.

“It felt good to do well in skiing,” Whalen said. “You are the one who has to encourage yourself. It definitely brought out a lot of strength in me.”

The John Jay senior used to play volleyball and now still lacrosse but has concentrated on skiing for the John Jay/North Salem squad this year, after skiing at the Okemo Mountain School in Vermont earlier in her sports career.

Whalen said she feels more confident as a person because of skiing and dealing with winning and losing. “You are always against one other person so no matter what, it’s really, really hard to win,” she said.

Though disappointed with her 13th place finish in the recent state championships in the giant slalom, she said she was just happy to place, given the competitive playing field, noting that her results for the slalom last year were better.

This was Whalen’s second year of skiing on the varsity team after her Okemo. During her sophomore and freshman years, she would spend approximately five months attending school there, from late November until sometime in March. She also spent between one and two months at the Vermont based-school in seventh and eighth grades.

“I was doing really well in Vermont,” said Whalen. “A lot of races ended up being during the week and to get where you want to be, you have to be full-time during the week so we train every single day.”

While skiing in New England helped her immensely on the slopes, she explained why she came back to John Jay full-time for her junior and senior years.

“All of my siblings have done it and they loved it,” Whalen said. “They all competed really well too. I was excited for that. Also, junior year was when SAT’s came around, ACT’s too. I was also on the varsity lacrosse team, it was just so much time was taking up by skiing that I had to focus back home and be there for other sports and schoolwork.”

In addition to skiing, Whalen also plays defense for the John Jay girls lacrosse team. This spring will be the third year on the squad.

She enjoyed volleyball—Whalen played modified in middle school, then for the freshman and JV teams—but found three sports to be too much. And though she has enjoyed tremendously the camaraderie of the lacrosse team, the thrill of the slopes and snow still calls.

 “Skiing is my passion; it’s a huge part of my life,” Whalen said.

Good habits in homebuying | Inman News

  

When people think of post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, they may associate it with grizzled vets flashing back to gunfights in the rice fields of Da Nang, Vietnam.

But much of the buzz on the real estate “Interwebs” lately has been about how the mortgage market is now suffering from its own version of PTSD from the spanking it took after lending so much money so easily and, as a result, how much harder it has gotten to qualify for a mortgage loan over the last several years.

Virtually no one disputes that subprime loan guidelines were exceedingly loose. But the numbers seem to show that today’s standards may be too tight, if the goal is simply to minimize default; in fact, the default rates on loans originated after the guidelines tightened up are much lower than default rates on loans made before the subprime era even started inflating the real estate bubble.

In addition to the mortgage industry’s PTSD, consumers have their own version of the disease to deal with, and it manifests differently in different consumers. Some are so crushed by having lost a home or seeing those around them lose theirs, that they have decided to hoard their dollar bills under their mattresses (or in their savings accounts) despite having many better, more profitable uses for them.

This behavior isn’t nearly as dangerous, though, as the symptoms exhibited at the other end of the consumer PTSD spectrum, where people are actually experiencing anticipatory PTSD. That is, they are so crushed by the idea that this current trough in home prices is their last possible chance — in life — to ever afford a home.

They are so traumatized by what they’ve been hearing about lending guidelines, their utter belief that homeownership is an instant wealth jackpot (don’t get me wrong — it’s important, but it’s not a panacea) and the fear that they will never be able to afford a home after the current trough in the market that they view the mortgage process as a gauntlet.

They see underwriting as a path full of obstacles to fend off, work around, leap over, sneak under or slide by; the mortgage underwriter is what my favorite 10-year-old would call her personal arch-nemesis, the Goliath to her David.

As I see it, this situation calls for a big old rethink. Fact is, the lending guidelines are what they are. It’s possible they’ll get a little looser, but the days of no money down, bad credit, no income documentation, no assets and you’re still approved to borrow hundreds of thousands of dollars? Long gone, and likely — hopefully — not coming back anytime soon.

And over the long term, it’s likely that mortgage money will become even scarcer than it is now.

At the risk of repeating myself, though, default rates on today’s mortgages are low — very low. Lower than they were in 2002 and 2003, before the subprime loan came into vogue. And that’s great. While it may mean that guidelines are too tight today, screening out many a creditworthy borrower, it also means that something about these guidelines is working.

The lending industry’s position is that all these requirements — from higher down payments, to lower debt-to-income ratios, to higher credit scores, and even the requirement to document income and assets — simply screen out people who are highly prone to default on their home loan.

And that’s true. But for those consumers whose chief aim in life is to subvert, barely scale past, or wish and pray for relief from these requirements, there’s another way to think about them. They are habit-forming. More precisely, they form good habits.

In the process of saving up the down payment, you create strong money-management habits — eliminating unnecessary expenses, saving every month and becoming self-reliant.

You may feel like an island unto yourself, but you will never feel that as intensely as when your income is interrupted and you need to make your mortgage payments. It’s best to create the habit of creating savings upon which you can rely now, before you buy.

To get to that target credit score, you must responsibly manage your debt, sometimes reducing it, other times simply paying every bill on time, every time. Turns out, this is also a handy habit for homeowners to have.

In the process of getting to a debt-to-income ratio that allows you to afford a home that works for your family and your finances, you learn to delay gratification and pay for things as you go, versus buying the biggest and best of everything on credit.

Lenders’ work stability requirements? They force you into the prerequisite for smart homeownership in the current market climate of having a stable job or career in one industry, rather than needing or wanting to move around for work or having job interruptions (no matter whose fault they are).

MC Hammer (I know — I just dated myself) once said, “It’s all good.” If you want to buy a home and are dreading these mortgage guidelines, rethink them.

These are proving grounds, a training course in good habits. I assure you that the habits you form in the process of qualifying for a loan in today’s tight mortgage market will stand you in very good stead as a homeowner, for a long, long time to come.

Tara-Nicholle Nelson is author of “The Savvy Woman’s Homebuying Handbook” and “Trillion Dollar Women: Use Your Power to Make Buying and Remodeling Decisions.” Tara is also the Consumer Ambassador and Educator for real estate listings search site Trulia.com. Ask her a real estate question online or visit her website, www.rethinkrealestate.com.