Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I only pay in full using cash. Unlike millennials, we don’t need to borrow money in order to buy the most fundamental of things. We neither seek nor desire credit, though many request lines of credit from us.
Lol. We pay the balances in full every month, Boomer. We aren’t borrowing money to buy fundamental things. I’m holding my money an extra 45 days longer than you on average and I get to collect interest on it before needing to pay the bill. Oh and I average about $10-$15k of free travel every year on the points I accumulate. Your lack of understanding of basic financial principles would be less shocking if you also weren’t so condescending in your ignorance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I only pay in full using cash. Unlike millennials, we don’t need to borrow money in order to buy the most fundamental of things. We neither seek nor desire credit, though many request lines of credit from us.
Lol. We pay the balances in full every month, Boomer. We aren’t borrowing money to buy fundamental things. I’m holding my money an extra 45 days longer than you on average and I get to collect interest on it before needing to pay the bill. Oh and I average about $10-$15k of free travel every year on the points I accumulate. Your lack of understanding of basic financial principles would be less shocking if you also weren’t so condescending in your ignorance.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I only pay in full using cash. Unlike millennials, we don’t need to borrow money in order to buy the most fundamental of things. We neither seek nor desire credit, though many request lines of credit from us.
Anonymous wrote:The only reason I ever use a credit card is for the fraud protection. I pay off the balance weekly so that I have a 0 on my monthly statement (or close to 0 if I buy one or two things with it on the day before the statement date). I also never charge more than I have in my primary checking account with a minimum 1k buffer. Hth
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I only pay in full using cash. Unlike millennials, we don’t need to borrow money in order to buy the most fundamental of things. We neither seek nor desire credit, though many request lines of credit from us.
My. People request lines of credit from you? Fancy that!
This story has me picturing a tight-fisted, ill-educated Dickensian woman of low means living in a rundown neighborhood where she and her husband are loan sharks and who doesn't understand credit cards and doesn't realize she's lost out on enormous amounts of free money via cash back or free trips via points for flights and hotels.
I have never carried a credit card balance and always paid off in full at the end of every month. It's automatically done. I've gotten thousands back in cash back over the years as well as free flights to Europe. Don't think I've touched cash in years. And I have zero zip zilch debt.
You’re a low-level retail borrower. Doing well on a small scale. I, however, am a major institutional lender. I receive millions of dollars per day in income thanks to the aggregate desperation for leverage and spending exhibited by people such as yourself. Rule #1: always be the smartest person in the room!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I only pay in full using cash. Unlike millennials, we don’t need to borrow money in order to buy the most fundamental of things. We neither seek nor desire credit, though many request lines of credit from us.
My. People request lines of credit from you? Fancy that!
This story has me picturing a tight-fisted, ill-educated Dickensian woman of low means living in a rundown neighborhood where she and her husband are loan sharks and who doesn't understand credit cards and doesn't realize she's lost out on enormous amounts of free money via cash back or free trips via points for flights and hotels.
I have never carried a credit card balance and always paid off in full at the end of every month. It's automatically done. I've gotten thousands back in cash back over the years as well as free flights to Europe. Don't think I've touched cash in years. And I have zero zip zilch debt.
Anonymous wrote:Use a credit card everywhere. When I was younger and only had a debit card I had my info stolen from a merchant who had a security breach because I used it for every purchase. The more places you use it the higher the chance it’ll get skimmed, it only takes ONE store to get hacked and now your info is in the hands of criminals.
It’s much worse to have actual money taken from your bank account than fraudulent charges made on your CC. Always use CC, it’s a great layer of protection against fraud.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I only pay in full using cash. Unlike millennials, we don’t need to borrow money in order to buy the most fundamental of things. We neither seek nor desire credit, though many request lines of credit from us.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I only pay in full using cash. Unlike millennials, we don’t need to borrow money in order to buy the most fundamental of things. We neither seek nor desire credit, though many request lines of credit from us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Autopay is the best. There are so many annoying little monthly accounts it’s nice not to have to worry about them.
I use cash primarily because I like to and I don’t care about risks vs benefits. I have a credit card and a debit card. My dh gives me $3,000 in cash every month because I’m not working and he likes to even though I don’t need so much money. I do deposit cash into my account when I have an excess in my draw.
Why on earth is he giving you cash? That's asking to be robbed.