You Are Not Failing: Navigating Student Loan Debt, Mental Health, and Wage Garnishment

Student loan debt is not just a financial issue; it is a mental health issue, a workforce issue, and a generational equity issue.
According to data from EdTrust, more than 43 million Americans carry student loan debt, but the burden is far from evenly shared. Black women, in particular, hold the highest average student loan debt of any demographic group, often borrowing more to pursue education while earning less once they graduate. Years after completing college, Black women still owe significantly more than their peers, not because of poor financial choices, but because of systemic inequities in wages, wealth, and access to repayment relief.
This debt doesn’t just live on paper. Research consistently links student loan debt to higher levels of stress, anxiety, and depression, as well as delayed life milestones such as homeownership, starting a family, and saving for retirement. For borrowers already struggling to make ends meet, the return of aggressive collection practices can deepen feelings of panic, shame, and exhaustion.
As the Trump administration resumes collection efforts, including wage garnishment, many borrowers are confronting not only shrinking paychecks but also the emotional weight of a system that offers little margin for error. For Black women and other traditionally underserved borrowers, this moment is especially heavy, as they continue to carry debt while supporting families, communities, and workplaces.
If this is you, know this: you are not failing. You are navigating a broken system, and you are not alone.
After the COVID-19 pandemic pause, student loan borrowers were given a temporary reprieve from monthly payments. Now, as wage garnishment and other collection efforts ramp up, many are left wondering how to absorb this renewed financial strain and reintegrate payments into already tight budgets.
I spent years in the nonprofit sector before moving into financial strategy work. I’ve seen how financial stress can take over your life, and I’m here to tell you: you’re not failing.
With wage garnishment already underway, borrowers in default may feel the impact immediately in their paychecks, often without warning. If your student loans are in default, wage garnishment is a real possibility, but it does not have to define your future. Clarity, awareness, and strategy can help you move forward, even if you are already playing catch-up.
- Start by resisting panic and getting clear. Take a deep breath, then pick up the phone. Call your loan servicer to understand exactly where your loans stand and what options are available. In many cases, enrolling in a repayment or rehabilitation program can pause or prevent wage garnishment. Doing nothing is not a strategy, but taking action can change your trajectory.
- Next, stabilize your spending. Student loans are not going away, and the days of managing finances as if payments were permanently paused are over. Review your budget with fresh eyes and identify adjustments that allow you to account for this renewed monthly obligation. Reintroducing your student loan payment intentionally allows you, not the government, to decide how your money is prioritized.
- If your current cash flow cannot absorb another bill, it may be time to strategize ways to increase income or create short-term flexibility. This might mean temporary side work, negotiating hours, leveraging employer benefits, or restructuring other debts. The goal is not perfection but creating breathing room as you adjust.
And even with planning, it’s important to say this plainly: student loan debt is a national financial crisis. It is not a personal failure, and it is not a burden you should carry alone. These are not normal circumstances, but that does not mean you cannot survive them. Let this be your reminder: this debt does not define you.
Student loans may shape this season of your life, but they do not measure your worth, your intelligence, or your effort. You did what society told you would lead to opportunity and stability, and you are now navigating the consequences of a system that did not hold up its end of the bargain.
Be clear about this truth: student loan debt is a policy failure, not a personal one. Borrowers, especially Black women, have shouldered higher costs, earned lower wages, and received fewer protections, all while being told to simply manage better. The strain you feel is not a reflection of your choices, but of a system that has normalized inequity and called it responsibility.
So take the steps you can. Make the call. Build the plan. Adjust the budget. Do not internalize a burden that was never meant to be yours. Progress may feel slow, but every action you take is is moving you in the right direction.
This moment is heavy, but it is not permanent. You are not behind. You are not broken. You are navigating an unjust system with resilience and resolve.
And one day, this chapter will read not as the moment you were overwhelmed, but as the moment you refused to give up.
Shavon Roman, CEO, Heal Plan Invest – Guest Contributor
