Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kept my TSP investments in the G fund for the first 2.5 years of my Fed career. Whoops
Ugh, me too.
Anonymous wrote:Bailing out our adult kids. We taught them fiscal responsibility unfortunately they married spenders and didn't put that foot down. Even after straightening them out several times they still managed to fall into heavy debt.
After realizing we are $100,000 less in our pockets because our children can't, excuse me, won't practice what we have preached, we decided to cut them off. We deserve a life too. My husband and I never relied on anyone for help. If we didn't have the money we saved for whatever. Basics were never a problem but extras were. Our kids were well aware growing up how the household ran. Seems like no one even tries to sacrifice anymore. It's gimme I want.
It still amazes us how they grew up to be such non planners and ignorant about finances. College graduates with no common sense. Or maybe they just don't care. Still pondering their neglectful ways. Can't figure it out.
Speak of the devil, one kid is on the phone right now asking Dad if he can swing a warehouse shopping trip later today. They are low on stuff and money. We never say no to food or things the house needs but damn, launch already okay ? The joys of parenthood. And grandparenthood. And whatever else.
Anonymous wrote:Investing with a friend that was a broker. Sadly, more than once.
Anonymous wrote:Buying into the nonsense that renting is throwing money away and everyone should buy a home no matter what. Bought a home at the top of the market, spent thousands upon thousands on maintenance, outgrew it during the crash, held onto it for several more years in the hopes it would recover, went through several lackluster tenants, and finally cut my losses. Would have been better off keeping that money under my mattress or wiping my butt with it instead of spending $$$ on toilet paper.
Anonymous wrote:
3. Buying a condo. Worst investment ever
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My worst financial decision was pursuing a degree and career field I loved without realizing it would largely not allow me from having children.
What was the field?
Anonymous wrote:
Same thing with car leases. I pay $200/mth for 15,000 miles/year through a relative's employee discount. Tell me how buying a car with a big down payment and watching things start to break at 100,000 miles is better financially, especially after tires, batteries, belts, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Buying into the nonsense that renting is throwing money away and everyone should buy a home no matter what. Bought a home at the top of the market, spent thousands upon thousands on maintenance, outgrew it during the crash, held onto it for several more years in the hopes it would recover, went through several lackluster tenants, and finally cut my losses. Would have been better off keeping that money under my mattress or wiping my butt with it instead of spending $$$ on toilet paper.