Anonymous wrote:At least one million Americans cannot. And many of them are working their asses off to try to have a savings buffer but really don’t have the income to do it.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I are retired. We just applied for social security. That money will go to a sister, son and family, grandchild because
1. we saved enough for ourselves and
2. they need help.
BTDT no one helped us and it was a struggle. If we can relieve some financial stress we do it no questions asked. Today is the end of the month, everyone needs food and gas help. Son got $500, sister got $200, grandson in college got $300. One social security check will be enough to help them all.
We also pay grandson's vehicle insurance. He tried but instead of him avoiding us over that little thing we just pay it. He always says thank you and he's a really good smart kid. We outright bought his vehicle too. My husband said do good in school that's all we ask. Straight A student in his second year. He has no debt. We love him deeply.
We have a second account for our medical needs and $16,000 on a HSA card we never used. We could have withdrawn that but we didn't need it. That buys my granddaughter her breathing treatments and glass when needed, medicine. Clothes, shoes, school supplies, whatever, we buy.
This is how God intended us to be. Not judgmental, not greedy, be humble and loving and caring. If you can share, share. Plus on the selfish side, it makes us feel good. My kids have no savings. My sister has no savings. My grandson has no savings. Ever been helped ? The profound feeling of being able to breathe ? THAT is why we do it. We also don't wait for them to ask, we just do it.
But we have no kids at home or in college, nor do we have an extravagant lifestyle. Minimal bills. Not bragging at all. It just happened that way. Nothing in this world matters more to us than being able to help. And since God helped us get here, we love earning God points. I never dreamed we'd be where we are now. We sure didn't start out this way. No lie. Broke should have been our last name.
Maybe one day we'll all have what we need and some wants taken care of too. Wouldn't that be wonderful ?
Dang. I feel a Barry Manilow song about to bust out.
Looks like we made it. LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well to answer the question on the title, yes we do have 500$ but DH has also had friends hit him up to borrow (knowing full well it won't ever be paid back). It probably is fairly common for friends to ask to borrow. 500$ seems like a crazy small amount but some people love pay check to pay check.
Such a "crazy small amount" but you won't help. Lol.
Anonymous wrote:At least one million Americans cannot. And many of them are working their asses off to try to have a savings buffer but really don’t have the income to do it.
Anonymous wrote:For many, many years I did not have any extra money. I lived paycheck to paycheck and knew to the penny how much money I had in my bank account. Not everybody has emergency funds. My circumstances is that I grew up poor, got my college education partially by tuition reimbursement from companies that worked at, adèle I took the plunge at the age of 27 quit my job, got student loans and finished my degree. And after college I still lived paycheck to paycheck because I had to pay my loans back, had car payments, had to pay rent, etc. it was after I was out of debt that I finally start saving. I was never a big spender. It’s just I did not have Rich parents to set me on my path. I’m just trying to give you a different perspective as to why someone might not have emergency funds. It happens.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is more common than people realize - also people tend to assume everyone is in the same situation as them.
I live in Arlington in a neighborhood of $750k-$1.5M homes. I have heard plenty of people make comments that assume that every family has an extra $50 - 500 for a coach gift, impromptu dinner out, last minute invite to a baseball game or long weekend at a cabin. I’m also heard comments that acknowledge an unplanned expense at the end of the month is an issue - can’t purchase school supplies until payday, can’t take care of a tree that came down in a storm immediately, can’t fix a car after a fender bender, thought the recital costume payment was next month. These comments are made as if everyone shared the same stress and dread over unplanned bills.
Anonymous wrote:At least one million Americans cannot. And many of them are working their asses off to try to have a savings buffer but really don’t have the income to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's one thing to make a decision as a family that you won't lend the money to your friends. It's entirely different to come on here to ask such a moronic and tone deaf question. Millions of people don't have any savings. Millions of people don't have healthcare. Millions of people live paycheck to paycheck.
+2
OP- do you feel superior now?
DP.. to me, some of the "millions of people" are in the situation that they are in due to their own making. They refuse to save and cut spending.
Yes, millions can't afford healthcare. That's a shameful indictment of the healthcare system in this country. But,we aren't talking about a $6000 medical bill here.