Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › $500k and 33years old, when is enough enough?
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December 21, 2010 at 9:48 AM #644156December 21, 2010 at 9:51 AM #643056jstoeszParticipant
[quote=Doooh][quote=zzz]Are you talking about welfare and SSI? Would you really want to have so little money to qualify, and would you be happy with that lifestyle not to mention what you cannot provide your children with? Also what message does that send to your kids, there are many to choose from, I’ll let you pick? Is your wife going to stay married to you living in poverty?[/quote]
I ment 1.5-2 years on unemployment making $13 and hour. I was also referring to Obama care.
If this health care fiasco isn’t squashed come 2014, I’d be stupid not to take full advantage of it. It is what Polosi said right? “We need to be free to live our dream, outside of worrying about health insurance” or something like that. I don’t think she understands the consequences of such thinking.
I’ll take her up on it though, and won’t think twice about morality. I quit, and you can pay for my health care. I’m sure as hell not going to be forced to pay for yours by making 6 figures a year. I’ve paid my fair share at a young age.
This is how you kill productive citizens.
Your right I’d go stir crazy if I were sitting at home for 2 years. But that’s not what the post is about.[/quote]
It sounds an awful lot like you are thinking of going galt! I sometimes wonder if such colonies in the mountains exist…I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.
December 21, 2010 at 9:51 AM #643127jstoeszParticipant[quote=Doooh][quote=zzz]Are you talking about welfare and SSI? Would you really want to have so little money to qualify, and would you be happy with that lifestyle not to mention what you cannot provide your children with? Also what message does that send to your kids, there are many to choose from, I’ll let you pick? Is your wife going to stay married to you living in poverty?[/quote]
I ment 1.5-2 years on unemployment making $13 and hour. I was also referring to Obama care.
If this health care fiasco isn’t squashed come 2014, I’d be stupid not to take full advantage of it. It is what Polosi said right? “We need to be free to live our dream, outside of worrying about health insurance” or something like that. I don’t think she understands the consequences of such thinking.
I’ll take her up on it though, and won’t think twice about morality. I quit, and you can pay for my health care. I’m sure as hell not going to be forced to pay for yours by making 6 figures a year. I’ve paid my fair share at a young age.
This is how you kill productive citizens.
Your right I’d go stir crazy if I were sitting at home for 2 years. But that’s not what the post is about.[/quote]
It sounds an awful lot like you are thinking of going galt! I sometimes wonder if such colonies in the mountains exist…I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.
December 21, 2010 at 9:51 AM #643707jstoeszParticipant[quote=Doooh][quote=zzz]Are you talking about welfare and SSI? Would you really want to have so little money to qualify, and would you be happy with that lifestyle not to mention what you cannot provide your children with? Also what message does that send to your kids, there are many to choose from, I’ll let you pick? Is your wife going to stay married to you living in poverty?[/quote]
I ment 1.5-2 years on unemployment making $13 and hour. I was also referring to Obama care.
If this health care fiasco isn’t squashed come 2014, I’d be stupid not to take full advantage of it. It is what Polosi said right? “We need to be free to live our dream, outside of worrying about health insurance” or something like that. I don’t think she understands the consequences of such thinking.
I’ll take her up on it though, and won’t think twice about morality. I quit, and you can pay for my health care. I’m sure as hell not going to be forced to pay for yours by making 6 figures a year. I’ve paid my fair share at a young age.
This is how you kill productive citizens.
Your right I’d go stir crazy if I were sitting at home for 2 years. But that’s not what the post is about.[/quote]
It sounds an awful lot like you are thinking of going galt! I sometimes wonder if such colonies in the mountains exist…I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.
December 21, 2010 at 9:51 AM #643844jstoeszParticipant[quote=Doooh][quote=zzz]Are you talking about welfare and SSI? Would you really want to have so little money to qualify, and would you be happy with that lifestyle not to mention what you cannot provide your children with? Also what message does that send to your kids, there are many to choose from, I’ll let you pick? Is your wife going to stay married to you living in poverty?[/quote]
I ment 1.5-2 years on unemployment making $13 and hour. I was also referring to Obama care.
If this health care fiasco isn’t squashed come 2014, I’d be stupid not to take full advantage of it. It is what Polosi said right? “We need to be free to live our dream, outside of worrying about health insurance” or something like that. I don’t think she understands the consequences of such thinking.
I’ll take her up on it though, and won’t think twice about morality. I quit, and you can pay for my health care. I’m sure as hell not going to be forced to pay for yours by making 6 figures a year. I’ve paid my fair share at a young age.
This is how you kill productive citizens.
Your right I’d go stir crazy if I were sitting at home for 2 years. But that’s not what the post is about.[/quote]
It sounds an awful lot like you are thinking of going galt! I sometimes wonder if such colonies in the mountains exist…I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.
December 21, 2010 at 9:51 AM #644166jstoeszParticipant[quote=Doooh][quote=zzz]Are you talking about welfare and SSI? Would you really want to have so little money to qualify, and would you be happy with that lifestyle not to mention what you cannot provide your children with? Also what message does that send to your kids, there are many to choose from, I’ll let you pick? Is your wife going to stay married to you living in poverty?[/quote]
I ment 1.5-2 years on unemployment making $13 and hour. I was also referring to Obama care.
If this health care fiasco isn’t squashed come 2014, I’d be stupid not to take full advantage of it. It is what Polosi said right? “We need to be free to live our dream, outside of worrying about health insurance” or something like that. I don’t think she understands the consequences of such thinking.
I’ll take her up on it though, and won’t think twice about morality. I quit, and you can pay for my health care. I’m sure as hell not going to be forced to pay for yours by making 6 figures a year. I’ve paid my fair share at a young age.
This is how you kill productive citizens.
Your right I’d go stir crazy if I were sitting at home for 2 years. But that’s not what the post is about.[/quote]
It sounds an awful lot like you are thinking of going galt! I sometimes wonder if such colonies in the mountains exist…I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.
December 21, 2010 at 10:07 AM #643066DooohParticipant[quote=zzz]Do either of you have any hobbies today, enjoy a bottle of nice wine, enjoy dining out, traveling the world? Because in what you’ve described, all those things are no longer affordable, are you ready to give that up at 33?[/quote]
We have hobbies and travel all the time. Our Mountain biking have taken us all over the western United States as of late. Moab, Zion/Gooseberry, Fruta, Durango, New Mexico, Tahoe, Mammoth. At least every other month were away for a 4-5 days at a time. Last year I took a month off, the year before the same, our honey moon was a month of travel.
Here’s the thing, you don’t have to blow loads to get away. We do everything dirt cheap. I don’t think most folks realize how cheaply travel can be had.
We travel in a truck and camper, we sleep in Walmart parking lots, and on forest land along the way. Truck stops work but they’re a little loud. We actually save $ on the road vs at work running the rat race if we care to. I’m not eating lunch out at work when were on vacation, though I’m very frugal that way too.
The biggest expenses we incur while traveling is fuel. But, after adding up the mileage and fuel usage to and from work, we actually don’t spend more than $200 more on fuel than I would commuting to and from work in a months time.
Travel is dirt cheap if done right. We despise hotels to the point of bringing our own sleeping bags with us on the rare occasions we find ourselves in a hotel room. The bed gets stripped and we try not to touch the mattress. Hotel bedding makes me wince just writing about it.
We make ridiculous amounts of $, and get gitty about clipping coupons, we live in a barn at the moment and the wife wouldn’t have it any other way. We’re stupid frugal sometimes, yet have enough toys to last a lifetime. I actually think I could swing the toys we have, meaning buying and selling them, and make a $15k income a year doing it…. Tax free. I’m confident I can do that year in and year out. Doing it in this down economy proves it. It’s actually easier when times are tough. Toys are cheap right now. It’s all about buy things with pennies and selling things for dollars.
Our hobbies wouldn’t suffer, frankly I think I could make them flourish as a bonified side gig… Again, if I had time.
All this to say, life would still be fun, we wouldn’t be hermits stuck in the mountains like some think life is without a steady cash flow… Well, unless we wanted to be hermits in the Mountains, life wouldn’t be that way.
December 21, 2010 at 10:07 AM #643137DooohParticipant[quote=zzz]Do either of you have any hobbies today, enjoy a bottle of nice wine, enjoy dining out, traveling the world? Because in what you’ve described, all those things are no longer affordable, are you ready to give that up at 33?[/quote]
We have hobbies and travel all the time. Our Mountain biking have taken us all over the western United States as of late. Moab, Zion/Gooseberry, Fruta, Durango, New Mexico, Tahoe, Mammoth. At least every other month were away for a 4-5 days at a time. Last year I took a month off, the year before the same, our honey moon was a month of travel.
Here’s the thing, you don’t have to blow loads to get away. We do everything dirt cheap. I don’t think most folks realize how cheaply travel can be had.
We travel in a truck and camper, we sleep in Walmart parking lots, and on forest land along the way. Truck stops work but they’re a little loud. We actually save $ on the road vs at work running the rat race if we care to. I’m not eating lunch out at work when were on vacation, though I’m very frugal that way too.
The biggest expenses we incur while traveling is fuel. But, after adding up the mileage and fuel usage to and from work, we actually don’t spend more than $200 more on fuel than I would commuting to and from work in a months time.
Travel is dirt cheap if done right. We despise hotels to the point of bringing our own sleeping bags with us on the rare occasions we find ourselves in a hotel room. The bed gets stripped and we try not to touch the mattress. Hotel bedding makes me wince just writing about it.
We make ridiculous amounts of $, and get gitty about clipping coupons, we live in a barn at the moment and the wife wouldn’t have it any other way. We’re stupid frugal sometimes, yet have enough toys to last a lifetime. I actually think I could swing the toys we have, meaning buying and selling them, and make a $15k income a year doing it…. Tax free. I’m confident I can do that year in and year out. Doing it in this down economy proves it. It’s actually easier when times are tough. Toys are cheap right now. It’s all about buy things with pennies and selling things for dollars.
Our hobbies wouldn’t suffer, frankly I think I could make them flourish as a bonified side gig… Again, if I had time.
All this to say, life would still be fun, we wouldn’t be hermits stuck in the mountains like some think life is without a steady cash flow… Well, unless we wanted to be hermits in the Mountains, life wouldn’t be that way.
December 21, 2010 at 10:07 AM #643717DooohParticipant[quote=zzz]Do either of you have any hobbies today, enjoy a bottle of nice wine, enjoy dining out, traveling the world? Because in what you’ve described, all those things are no longer affordable, are you ready to give that up at 33?[/quote]
We have hobbies and travel all the time. Our Mountain biking have taken us all over the western United States as of late. Moab, Zion/Gooseberry, Fruta, Durango, New Mexico, Tahoe, Mammoth. At least every other month were away for a 4-5 days at a time. Last year I took a month off, the year before the same, our honey moon was a month of travel.
Here’s the thing, you don’t have to blow loads to get away. We do everything dirt cheap. I don’t think most folks realize how cheaply travel can be had.
We travel in a truck and camper, we sleep in Walmart parking lots, and on forest land along the way. Truck stops work but they’re a little loud. We actually save $ on the road vs at work running the rat race if we care to. I’m not eating lunch out at work when were on vacation, though I’m very frugal that way too.
The biggest expenses we incur while traveling is fuel. But, after adding up the mileage and fuel usage to and from work, we actually don’t spend more than $200 more on fuel than I would commuting to and from work in a months time.
Travel is dirt cheap if done right. We despise hotels to the point of bringing our own sleeping bags with us on the rare occasions we find ourselves in a hotel room. The bed gets stripped and we try not to touch the mattress. Hotel bedding makes me wince just writing about it.
We make ridiculous amounts of $, and get gitty about clipping coupons, we live in a barn at the moment and the wife wouldn’t have it any other way. We’re stupid frugal sometimes, yet have enough toys to last a lifetime. I actually think I could swing the toys we have, meaning buying and selling them, and make a $15k income a year doing it…. Tax free. I’m confident I can do that year in and year out. Doing it in this down economy proves it. It’s actually easier when times are tough. Toys are cheap right now. It’s all about buy things with pennies and selling things for dollars.
Our hobbies wouldn’t suffer, frankly I think I could make them flourish as a bonified side gig… Again, if I had time.
All this to say, life would still be fun, we wouldn’t be hermits stuck in the mountains like some think life is without a steady cash flow… Well, unless we wanted to be hermits in the Mountains, life wouldn’t be that way.
December 21, 2010 at 10:07 AM #643854DooohParticipant[quote=zzz]Do either of you have any hobbies today, enjoy a bottle of nice wine, enjoy dining out, traveling the world? Because in what you’ve described, all those things are no longer affordable, are you ready to give that up at 33?[/quote]
We have hobbies and travel all the time. Our Mountain biking have taken us all over the western United States as of late. Moab, Zion/Gooseberry, Fruta, Durango, New Mexico, Tahoe, Mammoth. At least every other month were away for a 4-5 days at a time. Last year I took a month off, the year before the same, our honey moon was a month of travel.
Here’s the thing, you don’t have to blow loads to get away. We do everything dirt cheap. I don’t think most folks realize how cheaply travel can be had.
We travel in a truck and camper, we sleep in Walmart parking lots, and on forest land along the way. Truck stops work but they’re a little loud. We actually save $ on the road vs at work running the rat race if we care to. I’m not eating lunch out at work when were on vacation, though I’m very frugal that way too.
The biggest expenses we incur while traveling is fuel. But, after adding up the mileage and fuel usage to and from work, we actually don’t spend more than $200 more on fuel than I would commuting to and from work in a months time.
Travel is dirt cheap if done right. We despise hotels to the point of bringing our own sleeping bags with us on the rare occasions we find ourselves in a hotel room. The bed gets stripped and we try not to touch the mattress. Hotel bedding makes me wince just writing about it.
We make ridiculous amounts of $, and get gitty about clipping coupons, we live in a barn at the moment and the wife wouldn’t have it any other way. We’re stupid frugal sometimes, yet have enough toys to last a lifetime. I actually think I could swing the toys we have, meaning buying and selling them, and make a $15k income a year doing it…. Tax free. I’m confident I can do that year in and year out. Doing it in this down economy proves it. It’s actually easier when times are tough. Toys are cheap right now. It’s all about buy things with pennies and selling things for dollars.
Our hobbies wouldn’t suffer, frankly I think I could make them flourish as a bonified side gig… Again, if I had time.
All this to say, life would still be fun, we wouldn’t be hermits stuck in the mountains like some think life is without a steady cash flow… Well, unless we wanted to be hermits in the Mountains, life wouldn’t be that way.
December 21, 2010 at 10:07 AM #644176DooohParticipant[quote=zzz]Do either of you have any hobbies today, enjoy a bottle of nice wine, enjoy dining out, traveling the world? Because in what you’ve described, all those things are no longer affordable, are you ready to give that up at 33?[/quote]
We have hobbies and travel all the time. Our Mountain biking have taken us all over the western United States as of late. Moab, Zion/Gooseberry, Fruta, Durango, New Mexico, Tahoe, Mammoth. At least every other month were away for a 4-5 days at a time. Last year I took a month off, the year before the same, our honey moon was a month of travel.
Here’s the thing, you don’t have to blow loads to get away. We do everything dirt cheap. I don’t think most folks realize how cheaply travel can be had.
We travel in a truck and camper, we sleep in Walmart parking lots, and on forest land along the way. Truck stops work but they’re a little loud. We actually save $ on the road vs at work running the rat race if we care to. I’m not eating lunch out at work when were on vacation, though I’m very frugal that way too.
The biggest expenses we incur while traveling is fuel. But, after adding up the mileage and fuel usage to and from work, we actually don’t spend more than $200 more on fuel than I would commuting to and from work in a months time.
Travel is dirt cheap if done right. We despise hotels to the point of bringing our own sleeping bags with us on the rare occasions we find ourselves in a hotel room. The bed gets stripped and we try not to touch the mattress. Hotel bedding makes me wince just writing about it.
We make ridiculous amounts of $, and get gitty about clipping coupons, we live in a barn at the moment and the wife wouldn’t have it any other way. We’re stupid frugal sometimes, yet have enough toys to last a lifetime. I actually think I could swing the toys we have, meaning buying and selling them, and make a $15k income a year doing it…. Tax free. I’m confident I can do that year in and year out. Doing it in this down economy proves it. It’s actually easier when times are tough. Toys are cheap right now. It’s all about buy things with pennies and selling things for dollars.
Our hobbies wouldn’t suffer, frankly I think I could make them flourish as a bonified side gig… Again, if I had time.
All this to say, life would still be fun, we wouldn’t be hermits stuck in the mountains like some think life is without a steady cash flow… Well, unless we wanted to be hermits in the Mountains, life wouldn’t be that way.
December 21, 2010 at 10:09 AM #643071DooohParticipant[quote=jstoesz]I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.[/quote]
I would, but my wife wouldn’t… I’ve already asked if we could become Mormon.
December 21, 2010 at 10:09 AM #643142DooohParticipant[quote=jstoesz]I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.[/quote]
I would, but my wife wouldn’t… I’ve already asked if we could become Mormon.
December 21, 2010 at 10:09 AM #643722DooohParticipant[quote=jstoesz]I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.[/quote]
I would, but my wife wouldn’t… I’ve already asked if we could become Mormon.
December 21, 2010 at 10:09 AM #643859DooohParticipant[quote=jstoesz]I think some of the Fundamental LDSers are accomplishing this all over Utah, but I don’t think you are going to like the polygamist lifestyle.[/quote]
I would, but my wife wouldn’t… I’ve already asked if we could become Mormon.
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