I agree. I don't understand people who throw their hard earned money to charities. I believe charities waste most of the money anyway. I would rather invest in my family or people I personally know whom I can help. |
It's what they are taking home. This is a fact. |
This. I give exactly zero dollars to charity. I'm in the highest tax bracket and the government can support these people. My charity is at home. I have family members that I help out and have a sibling that lives hand to mouth that I absolutely will be supporting when she can no longer work. Not interested in giving it to a charity with bloated executive salaries, office space in DC, and ridutload retirement benefits. |
As an NGO worker, you have no idea what yoy are talking about and I firmly believe you are using this narrative as an excuse to be cheap and selfish. Most charities are not bloated with executive salaries and are full of hard working people giving up much more lucrative options to do something good for others. Look beyond the name brand charities (although many of those are also good) and find local charities doing work in your community. |
Thank you! I'm a former NGO worker because what was expected of me was a crazy amount of work for half of what I would earn for a similar job in the government. Those who chose to work for non-profits are saints. Thank you for dedicating your career to making our world better! |
PP here. Teacher trained as well and working outside schools. What about working for an education non-profit? There are after school and tutoring prograns, college access counseling programs, STEAM programs, and all sorts of ways to work in education without being a traditional teacher. Yes, you will a place that offers good health insurance but that is something you can ask about. Now I am going to call you out because you don't have a very nuanced view on schools, especially public schools and their issues. So starting a school may not be something suited to you. I am also going to call you out because I agree there had to be an inheritance somewhere or other types of privilege that is going unacknowledged. You were a teacher at one time? Not buying the regular job I did it myself. |
5 million is suggested amount to have at 65. At 50 you need at least 10 million |
Wait what? |
Crap, that means I needed $100M at birth. I did this all wrong. |
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Charity Navigator has some nice tools to help you pick a charity. Since I am interested in education, I used that filter plus a local area filter to find a charity that assists high school graduates who had IEPs in writing their resumes and finding employment. You have to look a bit and check that they are ranked highly, but you can find something with a mission you support if you go looking for it.
Believe me, I got pretty soured on charities after some not-great experiences working at some of them, but there are good ones out there. |
| Set higher goals. |
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Four years later. OP back. Kid is in college. Invested assets (married couple) now a touch north of $8M. Paid off townhome now worth $825k. Earned income $300k give or take. Have taken several vacations with a higher budget (Europe, Hawaii, Northwest US, Miami Beach). Expect $1M inheritance (remaining parent north of 90 with $6M and three heirs.). College account funded with $400k for remaining years plus grad school.
So what’s changed? Well my company got acquired and all of my management has been reassigned or retired. The reassigned job for me is very unsatisfying. I don’t think I’m ready to retire but I need some DCUM posters to knock some sense into my head. Spouse is working PT with no benefits making $23/hr. How do I make a plan to get unstuck? Would a therapist help? |
| 5 million is what you need at 67 to retire. At 45 you need at least 10 million |
Maybe YOU do. Everyone’s expenses and needs are different. |
What is your ideal job, and how easy would it be to find it somewhere else given that money is basically no object now? |