Too good to be true

Just a few days ago, I was ranting to a friend—yep, I got scammed buying a plant online.
I’d heard scams are everywhere in Dubai, and even the police can’t keep up. Guess who got hit the moment they arrived? Yours truly.
My friend immediately replied: “Two of my friends were scammed out of 200,000 USD—money they borrowed from family and friends to invest. In the end, they had to sell their brand new house to pay it all back. Total loss.”
Suddenly my sad little plant felt… not so tragic.
My sister had a similar experience years ago—introduced by a friend. At first, she invested a little, and every week she got her money back with interest. Classic bait. So when they asked her to go big, she put in her savings. Then… radio silence for 3 weeks.
Panic mode: ON.
She called nonstop, freaked out, and miraculously, she got her money back. Lucky. Probably one of the rare cases. Her “friend” must’ve had a guilty conscience… or thin skin. Either way, she got out, but not without losing sleep, appetite, and probably a bunch of brain cells.
When I was in Panama, a diplomat friend had to rush to the airport in the middle of the night to deal with a group of Taiwanese folks trying to transit to Peru with fake work visas—none of them spoke English or Spanish. Scam mules.
They were deported, but guess what? As soon as they landed back in Taiwan, they were released. No charges. Just walked away.
No wonder scams are out of control and victims are left crying into the void.
Moral of the story?
If something feels too good to be true, pause. Breathe. Think.
Or better yet—talk to someone you trust before doing anything. That one extra step could save you a lot of pain.
If I had done that last week, I wouldn’t have been scammed AGAIN while in Taiwan.
Not a huge amount of money, but still—SO annoying.
Take it. Consider it my donation to your bad karma.
Year-end’s coming, energy’s low (self-declared).
So be smart. Be cautious.
And most importantly—don’t let greed talk you into nonsense.

