@Bella, part of what you said described my SIL.
She does not & will not comprehend that you can't spend money that you don't have. She had no problem maxing out cards & throwing the bills into the trash when it came. She lived with her mom until she died & for 20 years had free rent & utilities. The only thing she had to do was to buy SOME of the groceries & put gas in her car. Oh, & when the debt collectors called and/or sent notices, she ignored them also. After my MIL died, we found out just exactly what kind of financial nightmare was ahead.
We tried to help her, but couldn't do it ourselves. We learned there is more to debt reconsiliation that just paying off the amounts, so we had her hire an attorney to do it. I told the attorney exactly what was happening & left nothing unsaid about her actions. The attorney asked if we were willing to help her manage her checkbook & we agreed. With his help, the outstanding debt was handled over a 2 year period & that part is over. We managed the checkbook & made sure the bills was paid. That should have started to give her some positive credit history.
She was handed back her debit card on her request at the beginning of the year & had been doing pretty good at staying within her budget & not buying BS. Her brother had phone alerts which kept us aware of her spending from the beginning.
As soon as she told us she was moving out of our rental to an apartment in late August, I told my husband she was going to have to start managing stuff herself. She said she had no problem keeping a checkbook as she did it before. I had everything caught up & balanced with the bills paid. Then suddenly, she started to go off track on her spending like there was no tomorrow. Husband finally said himself that after that spree he was now done & that she was on her own.
Yesterday the movers arrived & emptied the house of her belongings. I handed over all of her banking & information, explained everything was balanced & what she had to do to maintain it. I made sure the first month rent on her apartment had been paid & I walked away from it.
When she was married, she wrote checks on her account even though there wasn't money to cover them. Her husband went behind her cleaning up her mess around town so she wouldn't be arrested for passing bad checks due to insuffient funds. Between this & her lying about money & house bills not being paid, he was fed up & divorced her.
Maybe people who don't pay for their credit card bills should be treated the same way as people who paid with checks that had insuffient funds in their accounts by making it a criminal offense. Some people who choose to steal from others do it with credit cards. I see no difference between the two.