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I get stock dividends. That's how I make my money. |
Stop the shaming. It doesn't make her a bad parent. Dads do this all the time. Kids are not scarred from parents who work hard as long as the parent can maintain a loving relationship with them. Calm down with the judgments. What may work for some families might not work for another. |
Let me guess, your spouse is a big law partner. Anyone who knows the legal field would tell you that a non-GC, in house lawyer pulling in over $500K is doing very, very well. |
| OP pretty sure all the lawyers posting here work by the hour. If they can't bill, they won't get $. The build your own business posters end up creating a very different, some would say more sane, existence. |
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Excuse me? I didn’t say it made her a bad mother; I said it made her a bad parent. I don’t care what the gender is – it is not typical for parents not to see their families “for weeks” unless they are off to war or something. I don’t know any parent like that. |
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I made $3 million last year with about 10 hours of work per week as a business owner. Some weeks more, others almost nothing. Basically passive?
My business advice? Lie to people on the internet. |
What do you actually do/what business? |
| Depending on my clients $800-$1.2m. I started by own lobbying business. |
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Two of my closest friends are basically financially independent now
1. went to MIT, and eventually started a tech company that was then purchased by a big tech company for millions of dollars plus stock. When that company went public, she was set for life. She sometimes works and sometimes doesn't. Right now, she works like once a month. 2. Got a biglaw job but lived frugally -- she saved up enough money to buy two homes in Brooklyn in the early aughts. now she has a very steady amount of rental income coming in every month (something like $10,000 per month). So she also can work or not when she wants. She has three kids and took off a couple years here and there to be with them. She's working again, because she likes her job, but she doesn't need to. |
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I make $400k doing back of the house work at a tech company (meaning not a software engineer).
Honestly it wasn't what I knew, it was who I knew. In my 20s I took a lot of risks and jumped onto rocket ships. I worked my butt off, hustled in some crazy environments, and impressed the right people. I didn't actually make a ton of money but I gained a lot of skills and credibility in my field. In my 30s, one of the people I had impressed years before made me a job offer that totally changed my life (financially speaking). On the flip side, my spouse did a very traditional path - solid early work experience, top 5 b school, management consulting track after that. He also makes very good money, similar to me. We took very different routes and ended up in similar places, but the route we each took suited our respective personalities. So my real advice is to play to your own strengths. There are a lot of paths to success but they feel hard or easy to different people. |
Let me guess: Dad had high powered job. Love these women that mask their class level by telling the rest of us to ‘work hard’ Law school is what these days? 250,000? It ain’t about working hard and getting a law degree solely. There are so many nonverbal clues you likely just picked up by osmosis - oh and Dad’s law partner just happened to pick you up for that summer internship… |
Internet marketing. |
I posted earlier and don’t have a law degree (I think one of the four posters without a law degree). |
GOOD ADVICE! I learned this much later in my career. |
So you got lucky. You forgot that part. This post sounds like it was written by a man "I am awesome", but in reality luck plays a big part. |