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Everyone makes mistakes. I think in the grand scheme of things a few hundred dollars shouldnt be worth firing someone over. I know seasoned attorneys who fell for scams like buying $5,000 in gift cards because they got an email on their first day from someone pretending to be their boss. Try to give yourself some grace and if they fire you then you know it’s not the type of company that would allow an employee to learn from the mistake
I really understand what you’re going through. Not because I read about it somewhere, but because I’ve lived it — recently. Last October I got scammed by a local dealership that sold me a junk car “as‑is” with no warranty and no refund. Then this April I got taken again by an online scooter store advertising a “rugged outdoor travel companion” that turned out to be a dead, defective piece of junk. Those two mistakes together cost me around $10,000.
And just like you, I hated myself for falling for it. I felt stupid, ashamed, and overwhelmed. I couldn’t stop replaying the decisions in my head. I thought, “How did I not see this coming?”
But here’s what I learned — and what I want you to hear clearly:
> A scam doesn’t define you. It trains you — if you know how to learn from it.
Not by teaching you every scam tactic (there are too many), but by teaching you what truth looks like so the counterfeits become obvious.
1. Scams work the same way believable fantasies work
I used to be a fiction‑writer. I was raised in that craft. I put enough truth into my stories that I ended up believing them myself. They felt real until Scripture exposed them as false, manipulative, and hollow.
That’s exactly how scams work:
- They use emotional hooks
- They use selective truth
- They create urgency
- They present a story that feels real
If you’ve never been trained to separate a convincing narrative from reality, you’re vulnerable. That doesn’t make you stupid. It makes you human.
- Scams mimic believable stories
- Fiction is dangerous, but it becomes even more dangerous when treated as fact
2. You don’t learn discernment by studying scams
When I was homeless, someone taught me something I never forgot:
> “If you know what the real money looks like, you’ll spot the counterfeits.”
The U.S. Secret Service trains agents on authentic currency, not fake bills. Counterfeits are infinite in variety. Truth is singular.
That principle changed everything for me.
- Truth as reference point
- Stable criteria
- Knowing truth as protection
You don’t get scam‑proof by memorizing tactics.
You get scam‑proof by knowing what the real thing looks like.
3. Scripture became my “authentic currency”
The Holy Scriptures were what broke the illusion of my fictional thinking. They exposed the lies I believed — both the ones I told myself and the ones others told me.
And Scripture has a lot to say about deceivers:
- Proverbs 26:22–26 — describes the person who hides hatred behind smooth words. That’s the anatomy of a scam.
- Proverbs 26:28 — “A lying tongue hateth those that are afflicted by it.” A scammer doesn’t just deceive you; they despise you.
- 1 John 4:20 — exposes the contradiction of someone claiming love while acting in hatred. A scammer’s friendliness is a mask.
- Proverbs 14:21 — “He that despiseth his neighbour sinneth.” Scammers sin because they treat their neighbor as prey.
These verses taught me that deception isn’t random. It comes from a heart that rejects truth. And once you know what truth looks like, the counterfeits stand out.
- Scripture re‑anchors the mind
- Deception and hatred in Scripture
4. Correction is stronger than shame
My losses weren’t years ago. They were recent. They hurt. They shook me. But they didn’t destroy me.
I corrected myself, rebuilt my discernment, and today I work a government‑contracted job where I’m required to operate a CMV safely and speak the truth at all times. That didn’t happen because I was perfect. It happened because I refused to stay in error.
- Self‑correction
- Forward motion
Your mistake doesn’t define your future.
Your correction does.
5. What you’re feeling right now is normal — but temporary
Anxiety tells you “your life is over.”
Reality says:
- You made a mistake
- You’re job hunting
- You’re learning
- You’re still capable of rebuilding
You’re not ruined. You’re being trained.
Once you know what truth looks like, you’ll spot the counterfeits — both in the world and in your own thoughts.