12-10-2015, 09:19 PM | #155 | |
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When I retire, hopefully at a relatively young age, I could definitely see getting a part time job or volunteering. I have hobbies and like to travel but reality is my hobbies would take up a small part of my time and there are only so many trips I would take in a year.
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12-10-2015, 09:35 PM | #156 | |
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Drives: '15 SO M4/'20 Z4 M40i
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12-11-2015, 09:09 AM | #157 |
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You think you're depressed about money now with zero debt and a secure job? Try starting a business, managing investor's money, and actually employing people (very scary) and then get back to me....
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12-11-2015, 09:09 AM | #158 | |
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12-11-2015, 06:13 PM | #159 |
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As a somewhat OCD, analytical-type person, I also get a little too preoccupied with money sometimes. I do quite well, although it rarely feels like it in the Bay Area, CA. If I have a bad day in the market (like today) and my stock/fund picks aren't panning out, it gets to me - but I'm too much of a control freak to just hand that over to a money manager, even if that might be the smarter move.
What I do to calm myself down is think about how much worse most people have it, and in multiple dimensions. OP, think about this: first, you make more money than probably 95% of the U.S. Which means maybe 99% of the world. I don't stop here, however... I think about how lucky we are in other dimensions, as well. Humanity has been around for millions of years (well, depending on your beliefs, but a very long time regardless). Yet only in the last thousand years have we reasonably expected to live past 40. Only in the last hundred years have we gotten running water in every building (some people still do not have this). Only in the last 15 years or so have we all gotten our own phones, which also now can tell you virtually anything you'd like to know in seconds. If we were born even 0.1% earlier in the spectrum of human history, we'd be worrying about our next meal, and getting the flu might mean death. Also, think about your own existence. Are you still physically able, and with no serious diseases? If so, the things you take for granted are ever-constant limiting factors in the lives of many millions of others. I go even further: what if we were born dogs or snakes or insects? Sounds odd, but hey... there are 7 billion humans vs. how many fruit flies? If we truly are the top of the food chain and the most intelligent beings on Earth, then we are lucky as hell to be just that. I don't see any iguanas driving M3s... ![]() My point is, if you're a human living in 2015 in the U.S. making more than 19 out of 20 Americans, you should damn well have enough to be happy about. If not, go do something that makes you happy and stop worrying about inconsequential money "problems." I of course have my own financial goalposts and stress about making them happen, but I try to pause and think about the bigger picture. Even if I didn't meet these goals, even if my investments lost half their value, even I lost my job, would I be on the street? No. Would I still be better off than the vast majority of the present-day world until I got back on my feet? Yes. Be thankful for what you have and enjoy it, because as shown by a couple of people in this thread, someday it may not be there. |
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