[quote=deadzone]yes you guys are doing very well financially, keep patting yourselves on the back. But you do not represent the typical American. Most are in debt up to their eyeballs. The current inflation is destroying people.
Regardless, all I’m saying is this is the mother of all bubbles. It does make sense, if you take into account what the Fed has done (see balance sheet). So stop arguing with me and just jump on the pain train and enjoy the crash. I have no doubt you will make out much better than most.[/quote]
Lol.
We’re not getting butt hurt from a crash or giving ourselves a pat on our backs. We’re just laughing at your posts…. At least I am….
Crashes are good. They create opportunities of a lifetime… Apparently, most of us know what an opportunity of a lifetime is, because there were a few distinct one for the past twenty years.
Opportunities of the lifetime are good and I would highly recommend participating in one. I know opportunity of a lifetime triggers you, and I’m sorry that you might have missed the housing opportunity of a lifetime, and the pandemic stock market opportunity of a lifetime. But I’m sure if you wait another 20, 30 years, there could be another opportunity of a life time when you’re 58-60 years old. And it’s definitely worth putting your entire life on hold of that one-hit-one-shot opportunity of a a lifetime that you’ll clearly be able to spot, and seize on, just like the first couple of opportunity of a lifetime events that has happened in the first 20 years of your career….
Consistency is key. Because if one is able to spot and seize opportunity of a lifetime, there’s a high probability they’ll be able to do it again.
On the other hand, those that consistently miss opportunities of the lifetime, most likely will consistently miss them even when they do occur. Because it’s not the opportunity that’s the problem…It’s the person’s mentality that causes them to make the same mistake over and over again…