Quote:
Originally Posted by BlackDiamond
I also have this problem. I am just an unlucky person. In the span of a week a few years ago my car which was only 3 years old at the time, completely died and the warranty had just expired. Then my basement got flooded and I lost a large chunk of my ebay stuff (=lost revenue), my nana passed away (= travel expenses for me) and my favorite place to visit in the entire world permanently closed it's doors for business, and then the guy I'd been dating for 3 years at the time left me for his former flame. The latter 2 had no impact on my finances but just added insult to injury. Then, that same week, my 2 year old dog ate a string and required 2 extensive, expensive surgeries. Then he died because of complications of the second one. That week cost me almost 25K, most of it debt that I am still paying off. The dog surgery and car were the bulk of it. Oh, then I got sick as well and had a huge medical co-pay/deductible for the tests.
I've bounced back my EF/cash savings since then, but I still have $12K in debt. I now have dental work that needs to be done and my car needs new tires and some other work done and insurance doesn't cover most of it. My entire EF will be drained again. But at least I likely won't have any debt this time.
I get kind of annoyed when people preach about this because I have to wonder if they have ever had 4 or 5 serious financial emergencies come up in the span of a week or two before? I don't care who you are or how good you are with money: when your new-ish car dies, your nana passes away, your puppy requires surgery, you require medical testing and on top of that other sad things drain your engery within the span of a week you are going to either wipe out most of your savings or go into debt.
Unless you are rich. Which I am not. Not everyone brings home $6000 a month. Not everyone can put aside $100 a month for car repair. I honestly don't know a single person in real life who can afford that on top of normal savings. With just over $2K a month income in a HCOLA that would be virtually impossible.
|
Your mentality is one that keeps you going from emergency to emergency. You are living too close to the edge if emergencies pop up frequently.
You may have too much house, car, food budget etc. I don't bring home 6k either, but I dedicate 20% of my income to savings and investments. If I were to buy a bigger house or take on a car payment, I would emergencies frequently as well.