Anonymous wrote:I taught them absolutely nothing. They are fine with mediocre skills. They can learn themselves as capable young adults now.
I will, however, be involved when it comes to finances. They will not make the same mistakes I made. They will max out Roth every year they work, stay away from 401k, (but also HSA, HYSA, real estate) and keep their credit score safe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not allowed cursive??
Yes. It was totally disallowed in some local public schools. Cursive will end up being a socio-economic differentiator among current teens/twenty somethings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:O wish we had insisted on learning money management. Of our 2 kids, one is a saver and one is a spender. The spender is now mid-20s, and we are worried for their future
Based on what I see from my 20-something nieces and nephews, you can only teach this so well. My siblings-in-law are great at teaching it, but the kids are savers and spenders depending on their personality, not on what they've been taught.
Anonymous wrote:O wish we had insisted on learning money management. Of our 2 kids, one is a saver and one is a spender. The spender is now mid-20s, and we are worried for their future
Anonymous wrote:All the words to “We Didn’t Start the Fire”.