I love you guys that buy NEW vehicles . You pay $40k and I buy it from you in 4 years for $15K. It wont smell like new leather after my Jack Russell farts in it any way .
I think you will find that most folks that can afford to buy new , with cash , Don't. That is one reason they can.
I will also tell you that most people that retire before the age of 60 are debt free.
This is brilliant. And, dead on.
80% of millionaires today are FIRST generation rich. That means they started with nothing and earned what they have.
If you want to be rich, stop the carping and assumptions and class warfare, and start watching what rich people do- and copy it. (See above).
We are born a baby and die a baby. Meaning you will require care when you are born and again leading up to your death. Running on empty will only get you so far. Saving for your future will prevent you from living in some low-income assisted living facility in dirty diapers.
And most importantly, stop comparing yourself to the rich. Opportunity exists to everyone. Make a plan and stick to it.
Awesome nuggets of wisdom here. Of course, the latter will fall upon deaf ears of those who are focused on seeking out excuses not to get after it. Which, of course, includes laying on the ground whimpering when they fall off the horse.
The only way you fail- and "succumb"- is to not keep getting back up on the horse.
As for the OP- You remind me of myself- seriously immature when it comes to money. Seriously immature. $40K for a vehicle? Ridiculous. Not to mention making yourself a big payment by putting your family's home at risk. I have at least stopped that stupidity, and spent three years living like a pauper to pay off all my debt except house, which will be done this year.
What all those trying to justify borrowing conveniently ignore is RISK. I found out the hard way. I borrowed assuming I could always out-earn my stupidity- and I did... for awhile. When the economy crashed, so did my income, and I narrowly avoided losing everything. But the stress of those years damaged my health. Today I'm doing well but can never get those years- or that part of my health- back.
I'm still trying to learn how to be an adult about handling money. I have to, because I don't want to get to the end of my working years and find I'm broke. And even worse, giving up so I can indulge my whims, at the cost of my family's security- like the OP has done.
The truth is the truth, whether we choose to receive it or not.