Re: Do you live with debt?
Furthermore, I hate the way when you start a thread similar old threads come up beneath. Every time I seem to have started a similar thread about a year before. How am I supposed to remember all these threads I have started? Clearly there are character patterns at work and my psycho analyst would have a field day with some of this material.
Re: Do you live with debt?
My debts are my house and i am £150 overdrawn in one account and about £500 in another
my wife is out of work at the minute so that why the overdrafts are creaping up a bit
Re: Do you live with debt?
A mortgage is something I can kind of understand. People do need a home to live in and rents can be expensive and you get nothing for it. But the interest over 20 odd years is a killer and you are pretty much tied to it. A mortgage is a seriously hardcore investment, you need to make sure that job is permanent and you can stay on top of things. I'm not sure I would ever want to take on that kind of debt. Extremely risky in this day and age.
Re: Do you live with debt?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miles
A mortgage is something I can kind of understand. People do need a home to live in and rents can be expensive and you get nothing for it. But the interest over 20 odd years is a killer and you are pretty much tied to it. A mortgage is a seriously hardcore investment, you need to make sure that job is permanent and you can stay on top of things. I'm not sure I would ever want to take on that kind of debt. Extremely risky in this day and age.
you will always need somewhere to live tho, even if you rent you cant just decide you cant afford it anymore and stop
Re: Do you live with debt?
Also with these expensive tuition fees and banks lining up to fleece the new teenage consumers that debt is almost being ingrained into society. Debt is being seen as a natural state of affairs, unless you are the super rich and it shouldn't be that way. If schools can offer sex education classes, then they should also provide money management classes and counter the predatory financial institutions, but of course the state wouldn't really want to encourage that.
Re: Do you live with debt?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
erics44
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miles
A mortgage is something I can kind of understand. People do need a home to live in and rents can be expensive and you get nothing for it. But the interest over 20 odd years is a killer and you are pretty much tied to it. A mortgage is a seriously hardcore investment, you need to make sure that job is permanent and you can stay on top of things. I'm not sure I would ever want to take on that kind of debt. Extremely risky in this day and age.
you will always need somewhere to live tho, even if you rent you cant just decide you cant afford it anymore and stop
True, and I think that is a valid point. Mortgage debt is sometimes a necessary thing and I can see that. It is still fairly risky though and there is no guarantee that one is going to be employed all that time. At least with rent you can find something cheaper when things go wrong. There is never any excuse for never having banked some coin though and when things are tough you always need at least a little shrapnel to tide you over. A mortgage should be viewed as a life and death struggle and in many cases it probably is at some point.
Re: Do you live with debt?
I have about £600 of a debt which is going down each month.
I have a few hundred on a credit card and I'm usually a few hundred overdrawn.
My out goings are pretty much the same as my income so I spend what I earn. Most of the debt came from when I was in between jobs and it's not going down quicker because I've been investing a lot into my business recently.
Re: Do you live with debt?
When I was 23 years old I had £23,000 of debt in loans and credit cards, now I have virtually nothing and don't even use a credit card (the evil of the world!)
Re: Do you live with debt?
Re: Do you live with debt?
Interesting reading.
I was just curious really. I read my media everyday and see things around me and just wonder what the deal is for real folks on here.
Andre sounds like he's done very well for himself and so he he should being one of the more mature adventurers on here. Also good to hear that Big H is taking control and that Adam is becoming entrepreneurial too.
In my early 20's I was a bit like Big H and owed a fair bit and had nothing, but with a lot of hard work over the years and a serious mental overhaul I have eradicated the entire concept of debt and it just frustrates me when I read articles talking about the issue.
I drive a second hand car because I am not shallow enough to think that a new one really matters beyond getting to a destination, but it seems too many are stuck in the vain pursuit of empty consumerist goals at the expense of any guarantee of a decent old age. Governments are supporting very little when we are old and it's good to wise up to that sooner rather than later. And governments play the same game at the expense of younger generations when it comes to their own borrowing. It's quite sickening really.
A life without debt is the first aim for anyone and to then to try and at least guarantee some kind of future without government interference. Only then is anyone somewhat free. Government insurances are ponzi schemes that could collapse at any time. As are currencies too. They are worthless according to the whims of any government.
I started a thread an age back wondering if gold was the way to go for investment. The price has rocketed! I never invested and that frustrates me a fair bit, because I would have done well. Currencies are more kamikaze than ever. I am deviating from the thread somewhat, but just contemplating my own missed opportunities, which are on the whole, careful, but perhaps too careful.
Re: Do you live with debt?
Im the same as Andre, plus Im Happy with what I have. ;D
Re: Do you live with debt?
I have a home mortage of 130K and I think we have about 10k left on my wife's student loans. We have financed a couple vehicles but we have always put more than 50% down and paid them off quickly. We almost never have a balance on the credit cards. Really the only time we use them at all are for emergencies. So outside of my home and for the next year or so the rib's student's loans, we avoid debt like the plague.
Re: Do you live with debt?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
VictorCharlie
I have a home mortage of 130K and I think we have about 10k left on my wife's student loans. We have financed a couple vehicles but we have always put more than 50% down and paid them off quickly. We almost never have a balance on the credit cards. Really the only time we use them at all are for emergencies. So outside of my home and for the next year or so the rib's student's loans, we avoid debt like the plague.
Sensible behaviour. I do use credit cards, but only to order certain bulk products online and I pay it off immediately. I refuse to pay interest on that junk.
Credit is too easy and IMO people are too stupid and uneducated and I include smart, educated people in that list too. I watch TV and see loan commercials everywhere. However, I also read Russian literature of the 1800's and the money lenders are there too. Seemingly omnipresent and impossible to truly ever wipe clean.
Re: Do you live with debt?
I'm paying for a modest car on finance... it would take me too long to save for it I need it for business reasons. I would never take out any other form of loan though. That's one of the reasons my PT/Boot Camp Business has been a slow burner. Everything... and I mean everything, every bit of kit is something that I have either saved and paid for, or built.
I'd guess that about 3 quarters of what I have earned has gone back in to it and then I work paid hours on top of it to keep ticking over. I'm just about at the point now where it's all starting to turn in to income.