Five days into the nightmare I had to ask: How big was your initial mistake?
You see, if I understand it right, His ponzi scheme began when He did a stock trade that lost money. He said He did a bigger stock trade to cover that loss and lost money again. So he chose to omit those two trades from his statements that month to make the account balance sheet look better. And after that, He said it was too late.
The ponzi scheme was in place.
I remember, now, why you shouldn’t ask questions you don’t REALLY want to know the answer to.
$5,000.
My ENTIRE life, my marriage, my family, my dreams, my children’s dreams, our forever, our future, everything of mine and everyone else’s was destroyed…for $5,000. It made me want to throw up.
Even back in 1994, $5,000 was not a life or death amount. I was stunned that I had lost everything, and every other victim had suffered their own losses as well, for a measley $5,000. I hope I recover from that revelation. I don’t think I’ll ever look at $5,000 in quite the same light.
I remember thinking, “That’s all the mistake was–FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS? And now ALL OF THIS?”
The answer to my next question was even more unsettling. (To me.)
I asked: When did you do it? When did you suffer the loss and hide it?
He didn’t know. The man who had never forgotten a birthday or an anniversary (had even thrown in an “extra” one one year–what can I say, He was a good, kind, thoughtful and patient husband in many ways–yet another reason I had loved and trusted Him and had no reason to suspect what He was doing while at “work” those many years) didn’t know the date His crimes began.
How can the date you stole, how can the date you broke the law, NOT be etched in your memory forever?
Note to self: AGAIN, don’t ask questions you don’t want to know the answer to!