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Is everything as hard as it sounds?

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  • #16
    You should be glad that atleast you are aware of the thing so early. Nothing has happened now, start saving your money and think twice before you spend it on anything.Good luck

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    • #17
      Kudos to you for being aware of the need to use your earnings for your advantage. Understand the differences between good debt -spending that ultimately increases in value like education and bad debt which loses it's value month-by-month like a car or clothes.

      Does your employer offer a retirement plan? If not, a small investment monthly will garner big rewards in the future through the magic of compound earnings.

      Learn the difference between wants and needs. There is a vast difference and usually where the biggest money pitfalls lie. Read contracts carefully, you need to know and understand fees, cost of credit, interest rates and what they add to the cost of the desired item.

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      • #18
        ohh yeah each pay i put 9% in an superannuation fund, and i have had that since i started work at the age of 17. I now 22. I love going out and having fun by because i am still a student i find that i dont have alot of money at the moment and i dont get out much should i only save a little now and save more when i finish all my uni stuff? Like now i saving 700 a month and get paid 2000 a month i work all hours of the day around uni..

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        • #19
          there is no good in saving if you don't know what you want. BUT, what's even worse is, wasting money and later finding a better place to spend it.

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          • #20
            You invested in yourself with your education, and that is a great start.

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            • #21
              Originally posted by Joan.of.the.Arch View Post
              A fortnight is two weeks. USAmericans rarely use this word.
              Thanks! I know I looked it up once, but forgot.

              wonder why fortnight is two weeks? shortened of 14 nights?

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              • #22
                You sound a lot like me.... big spender when young...blew through tons of money as a teen (I started workin' at age 14). Never saved anything till I turned 21 when I made the offhanded decision to sign up for the retirement plan at my new job on my first day. A year later, I found this forum (in 2005) and it all hit me...that I should save and not spend. It took many, many months just to start the habit of saving money for something other than retirement. It took another year to realize that credit cards were something I could no longer handle.

                My husband and I married in 2006 when we were both 23. We were both very immature in handling money, and didn't like denying ourselves things (nothing fancy...just "things" we thought we couldn't do without). We very much desired to be "comfortable". Consequently, we had over $10,000 in CC debt by our 5 month anniversary (and we both worked full time jobs!), not including a $12,000 loan for a new car for him, a mortgage, and the loan on my own car. We cut up our credit cards in Nov. of 2006.

                It has now taken us over 2 years to crawl out of our self-imposed hardship called "debt". Today we are FAR more comfortable than we were when we were racking up debt - and much less stressed.

                I'm now 26 years old and have come full circle in my financial thinking over the past 4 years (thanks to this board!!!!). I fully regret not saving as a teen - but I also recognize that if one "realizes" all of this in their 20's and even early 30's, then that is a GREAT thing. I've seen many posts on here from people in their 40s & 50s who are *JUST* realizing what I had to learn, and they speak of much more "money" regret than I will ever have to endure.

                You have a terrific start in life - the key is though is to "keep at it". Is everything as hard as it sounds? For the people who flit their money away without thought for the future - it may not appear "hard" for them today, but their lifestyle will eventually catch up with them. For you, if you remain steadfast in your plan to be financially sound, then things may be hard for a while, but you will reap wonderful rewards in the future. After the past 4 years, I'm just beginning to reap the rewards of good financial decisions I made back them. And it's only going to snowball from here.

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by PrincessPerky View Post
                  Thanks! I know I looked it up once, but forgot.

                  wonder why fortnight is two weeks? shortened of 14 nights?
                  That's what I was thinking too.

                  Anybody not too lazy to google it?

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by thekid View Post
                    That's what I was thinking too.

                    Anybody not too lazy to google it?

                    Never mind. We'll get the kid to do it.

                    "The fortnight is a unit of time equivalent to fourteen days. The word derives from the Old English feorwertyne niht, meaning "fourteen nights"."

                    Fascinating.

                    Fortnight - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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                    • #25
                      I agree with ^^. That's more than most people do these days...

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                      • #26
                        Originally posted by thekid View Post
                        Never mind. We'll get the kid to do it.

                        "The fortnight is a unit of time equivalent to fourteen days. The word derives from the Old English feorwertyne niht, meaning "fourteen nights"."

                        Fascinating.

                        Fortnight - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
                        cool thanks

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