Just about every one faces moral dilemmas in their life. The way we handle them is different for each of us. We must use our life experience and our knowledge to handle the issues. I consider myself to be a person of good morals, however I will do what I have to do to ensure my family always has what they need. One example when I felt that my morals were questioned was thru work. My first ‘grown up’ official job was working as a teller at a bank. It was a good job, had health benefits, retirement, sick days, vacation time, no weekends or late nights, and best of all PAID HOLIDAYS!! It was a great job, it paid $12 hour at 19 and in 2005 that was a good income for a student with little bills. A short while later the bank that I worked for, was acquired by another bank who decided to shut our branch down. At this point I was married and pregnant and I had to have find a job with insurance quick. A friend of mine suggested a check cashing store because no banks were hiring. I thought no way, those places prey on low income families, and they take advantage of people who feel they have no other choice. After weeks of not finding anything I called the friend and asked her more of what the job entailed and I went for the interview. It ended up paying almost $5 an hour more than my teller job with the same benefits. I debated whether or not I could do the job, on the one hand I needed the money, it was an easy desk job, and I knew how to do it, on the other hand, I knew that I had to hide the risk from the customers as I explained the contract, I knew it was a loan that they may not be able to pay back and we might have to repo their only car. It finally came down to me saying I need the money and if I don’t work there someone else will and the customers still will get loans there. As I signed the contract I felt like I was selling my soul, but at the same time I knew that now I would get to afford the doctors visits and the rest of