Scallywags yes I take every precaution. Sugar babies very much so provides companionship. The more I spend the better the companionship. Time is money, and nothing is free. We go out to dinner, have dates or anything couples do on dates. We text each other and schedule dates to meet. I have dozens that would drop whatever they are doing to meet at a moments notice, like yesterday for example I asked if she wanted meet and she asked me what time and she was waiting for me.
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Originally posted by QuarterMillionMan View PostScallywags yes I take every precaution. Sugar babies very much so provides companionship. The more I spend the better the companionship. Time is money, and nothing is free. We go out to dinner, have dates or anything couples do on dates. We text each other and schedule dates to meet. I have dozens that would drop whatever they are doing to meet at a moments notice, like yesterday for example I asked if she wanted meet and she asked me what time and she was waiting for me.
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[QUOTE=james.hendrickson;n728690]
@QMM, well, the data are clear. People in happy marries are healthier, richer and they live longer. I would post the evidence here, but this point is obvious. You have economies of scale, social support, (usually) more income, etc. etc.
I disagree hubby and I are about to celebrate 32 years of marriage right now I have health issues, he has cancer, we don't have money (much extra) but we are very happy and always have been...I think that people that have money etc are the ones that are unhappy with life and get divorced more often
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View Post
Is what this is any different than dating? I only ask most seriously because well nowadays if you date after say age 25 it's basically a meat market with $$$. I don't want to sound cynical or judgemental (i'm not) but I am stating a fact considering I'm in my 40s now and every single woman I know divorced or single in their 40s is NOT looking for a partner unable to provide. I don't know how to say it politely but basically they are looking for someone to work/earn/good job/pull weight with income. NOT just a job but a real "income" and job. Low income need not apply. Sounds superficial and yes it is. But I sort of feel is it any different than putting it out there looking for good time for $? Only difference is how honest you are up front.
IF you are the "marrying type", then I think a huge financial win is to marry a partner who is frugal (regardless of his or her economic background), goal-oriented, shares your values & ambitions, is a doer, and straight-up just "conducive" to building wealth, As Dave Ramsey says, many marriages end because folks are quarreling over money, religion, parenting styles and in-laws.
Figure these out and it should all be good. Divorce is the single biggest factor that prevents you from building wealth. Better to be single and middle class than divorced and flat out broke.Last edited by Scallywag; 11-23-2021, 08:48 PM.
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Originally posted by mumof2 View PostOriginally posted by james.hendrickson View Post
@QMM, well, the data are clear. People in happy marries are healthier, richer and they live longer. I would post the evidence here, but this point is obvious. You have economies of scale, social support, (usually) more income, etc. etc.
Money cannot solve all the problems of life, and money certainly cannot buy us health or happiness, but without money we are bound to be quite unhappy. Also, people are unhappy for a lot of other reasons than poor finances -- sick children, disability, death of close family and friends, social isolation, physical / emotional / financial abuse in a marriage, lack of social or emotional support in a marriage, fights over religion, clashes over parenting styles and priorities, interference of extended family members (outlaws) in a marriage, etc. These things have nothing to do with money (or lack thereof) and hence money alone cannot be cited as the leading cause of divorce (esp as published research clearly demonstrates the opposite).Last edited by Scallywag; 11-23-2021, 09:31 PM.
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One of my wins turned into a loss yesterday.
I sold 12 magazines on ebay a week or so ago. I packed and shipped them. The box got delivered yesterday, but according to the buyer, literally just the box. Torn open, partly collapsed, and empty.
The buyer is a long-time ebay user with 100% positive feedback over 4,000, so I really have no reason to think he's scamming me. I issued a full refund. Only a $15-20 loss but a loss all the same.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by disneysteve View PostOne of my wins turned into a loss yesterday.
I sold 12 magazines on ebay a week or so ago. I packed and shipped them. The box got delivered yesterday, but according to the buyer, literally just the box. Torn open, partly collapsed, and empty.
The buyer is a long-time ebay user with 100% positive feedback over 4,000, so I really have no reason to think he's scamming me. I issued a full refund. Only a $15-20 loss but a loss all the same.
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Originally posted by kork13 View PostThat's wild. Shipped via USPS? If you used, I'm pretty sure all priority mail shipments include up to $100 of insurance and you could try a claim. Though if you used media mail, not sure that applies.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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I had many eBay fails, a DSL router which I know was working before shipping but buyer said didn't work so refunded $25 and told buyer keep it. A DDR4 Kingston 8 gb RAM which I pulled out of a new laptop and upgraded to 32 gb RAM so sold the 8 gb for $25 but buyer said didn't work so again refunded. Oh once sent a digital cam USPS small flat rate box insured, buyer never rec'd so refunded but USPS insurance paid up to the $50 insured value (i forget the value maybe $40) but was worth it.
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I ordered something from shop Disney that was too large. I figured it would be no problem to return it--after all we have a Disney store nearby. (Wrong!). They closed our Disney store down!
So, I boxed up the return and had to pay $11.75 to ship it back to Shop Disney.
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I'm trying to decide if this is a win or a fail. I broke my arm (slipped on ice) and had an overnight hospital visit and surgery. (I don't know how much it is going to cost, yet)
The reason it might be a win is because I was going to purchase D23 convention tickets in the pre-sale yesterday and they were all sold out by the time I logged in today. So, I guess I saved the cost of the tickets. (Although I do get a second chance today.)
So, be careful out there.
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