Anonymous wrote:Becoming a journalist.
Anonymous wrote:Kept my TSP investments in the G fund for the first 2.5 years of my Fed career. Whoops
Anonymous wrote:They need to teach personal finance in schools. I was so ignorant for so long.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school bc "we could". We also could have not.
Yup- us too.
We are the same boat. We assumed income would rise more than it did. We still make enough where we "can" (and we don't get aid) but it takes a decent bite out of our lifestyle now and will definitely leave us more limited in retirement.
We've repeatedly toyed with pulling them, but they are happy and doing well, so we just haven't been able to pull the trigger.
It's hard when they're happy, but kids are resilient and can adjust. If it's affecting your retirement savings, it's too expensive. I posted about this regret earlier- we are sending our son to public middle school and using the money for his college and our retirement- debt free college and elderly, financially solvent parents will be a wonderful gift some day. I have nothing against private school btw.
Yeah, I hear you and I am sure they would be ok. But we don't NEED to do this. We aren't ignoring retirement; we just aren't saving as much as we ideally would. We should still be ok, it just might not be as luxurious or carefree as I envisioned. We also have less margin for error if something like an illness or job loss occurs.
It would be an easier decision if we made around $50k more or less. Less and we simply couldn't (or couldn't without more sacrifices than we would be willing to consider) afford it minus aid we would still likely would not get. More and we could afford it relatively easily, although we would still be far from rick by private school standards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school bc "we could". We also could have not.
Yup- us too.
We are the same boat. We assumed income would rise more than it did. We still make enough where we "can" (and we don't get aid) but it takes a decent bite out of our lifestyle now and will definitely leave us more limited in retirement.
We've repeatedly toyed with pulling them, but they are happy and doing well, so we just haven't been able to pull the trigger.
It's hard when they're happy, but kids are resilient and can adjust. If it's affecting your retirement savings, it's too expensive. I posted about this regret earlier- we are sending our son to public middle school and using the money for his college and our retirement- debt free college and elderly, financially solvent parents will be a wonderful gift some day. I have nothing against private school btw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting married. Then, doubling down on that by becoming a parent. I haven't saved a dime since and the debt just piles up.
I am in financial despair because I married young( age 23) and never had opportunity to jumpstart a career because we were constantly moving due to DH jobs. He dealt with chronic unemployment and we lived a very unstable life moving to new cities for new opportunities. During a relatively stable period, where DH was thriving at work, we had two kids. Now DH job is on the line again and we have no savings as all our savings got depleted during the periods of unemployment. So marrying him has been a serious problem for me as you can see. Now at age 35, I’m trying to figure out a way to jumpstart a career but I can’t take on school loans or anymore debt. It’s tough. It’s more than tough actually.
Just take any job, like a receptionist or better would be an administrative assistance at an insurance company - if it's a decent insurance company they'll pay for you to take professional designations like the Are or CPCU (they don't cost that much anyway and are just as good as having a degree!). Don't waste money on university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting married. Then, doubling down on that by becoming a parent. I haven't saved a dime since and the debt just piles up.
I am in financial despair because I married young( age 23) and never had opportunity to jumpstart a career because we were constantly moving due to DH jobs. He dealt with chronic unemployment and we lived a very unstable life moving to new cities for new opportunities. During a relatively stable period, where DH was thriving at work, we had two kids. Now DH job is on the line again and we have no savings as all our savings got depleted during the periods of unemployment. So marrying him has been a serious problem for me as you can see. Now at age 35, I’m trying to figure out a way to jumpstart a career but I can’t take on school loans or anymore debt. It’s tough. It’s more than tough actually.
Anonymous wrote:Getting married. Then, doubling down on that by becoming a parent. I haven't saved a dime since and the debt just piles up.