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Rochard 10-13-2014 08:49 AM

$$$ for retirement
 
I see these commercials trying to scare me into saving money for retirement and some say you need $1 million in the bank to live until eight-five or some such non sense.

Looking at my in-laws, they are both in their seventies, their house is paid off, their cars are paid off, and they have no credit card debt. They have $100k cash in the bank, a few investments, have more or less no bills other than the regular power and utilities. They live off of social security, have few needs, and seem to have a positive cash flow every month.

Did I miss something?

Scott McD 10-13-2014 08:52 AM

I won't get anywhere near 85, but what a load of bullshit anyway.

My grandparents certainly don't have money put away but they have no real debts and enjoy their life. That's worth more than any amount of money...

Bryan G 10-13-2014 08:53 AM

All depends on how you want to spend your retirement. Do you want to just be getting by or do you want to have a ton of cash to travel and help out your kids and your grandkids.

slapass 10-13-2014 08:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252067)
I see these commercials trying to scare me into saving money for retirement and some say you need $1 million in the bank to live until eight-five or some such non sense.

Looking at my in-laws, they are both in their seventies, their house is paid off, their cars are paid off, and they have no credit card debt. They have $100k cash in the bank, a few investments, have more or less no bills other than the regular power and utilities. They live off of social security, have few needs, and seem to have a positive cash flow every month.

Did I miss something?

So if they need/want a new car? Roof? Europe vacation? Then one gets sick and wham savings are gone and the last one is living on half the income.

They are ok but is that what you want? To be ok?

Bryan G 10-13-2014 08:54 AM

Also I am not sure how it works it the usa but here we have RRSPs that we can invest in and it is a tax write off.

Sly 10-13-2014 08:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bryan G (Post 20252075)
All depends on how you want to spend your retirement. Do you want to just be getting by or do you want to have a ton of cash to travel and help out your kids and your grandkids.

And we have a winner.

Shap 10-13-2014 08:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252067)
I see these commercials trying to scare me into saving money for retirement and some say you need $1 million in the bank to live until eight-five or some such non sense.

Looking at my in-laws, they are both in their seventies, their house is paid off, their cars are paid off, and they have no credit card debt. They have $100k cash in the bank, a few investments, have more or less no bills other than the regular power and utilities. They live off of social security, have few needs, and seem to have a positive cash flow every month.

Did I miss something?

I guess it all depends on your pension or whatever you call it in the US. 100k with no money coming in is definitely not enough. 100k with 75k a year in pension is another story.

It comes down to lifestyle. Imo for most people 1million in the bank is nowhere near enough.

Barry-xlovecam 10-13-2014 09:42 AM

Don't save for your retirement? Cat food and bananas on your social security pension will be lots of fun. Remember, there are co pays on Medicare to make. Your property taxes and utilities will continue even if your home is paid for. You will need someone to maintain your home -- you won't be cutting your own lawn when you are 75 most likely. You will need an auto until you are 75 or in reasonable health to drive. You may want to live in assisted care when you are over 80 and not be dependent on your children for your housing and over-site/ or care.

It's is not cheap to get old -- my Mother is 92, sold her condo 16 years ago and her rent in an assisted care facility is $1,800 a month!

Rochard 10-13-2014 09:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bryan G (Post 20252075)
All depends on how you want to spend your retirement. Do you want to just be getting by or do you want to have a ton of cash to travel and help out your kids and your grandkids.

They don't travel - at all. Maybe at most every five years they will take a vacation to Connecticut to see family, but for the most part family comes out to visit them. Father in law is very much a kind of "stay at home" kind of guy; It's impossible to get him to drive or fly up to see us.

Our daughter is really their only grand daughter, and they take good care of her.

Quote:

Originally Posted by slapass (Post 20252076)
So if they need/want a new car? Roof? Europe vacation? Then one gets sick and wham savings are gone and the last one is living on half the income.

They are ok but is that what you want? To be ok?

The entire family is all auto mechanics, and they aren't the "new car" kind of people. They have a Durango and a Escape, both paid for. Even if the cars both died and they had to replace them, they wouldn't buy new cars - they would just buy a used SUV.

I don't know much about Society Security, but from what I see they each pull in $2500 a month. That's $60k a year, plus mom pulls in a small pension.

I think they are doing okay.

AaronM 10-13-2014 10:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 20252150)
Don't save for your retirement? Cat food and bananas on your social security pension will be lots of fun. Remember, there are co pays on Medicare to make. Your property taxes and utilities will continue even if your home is paid for. You will need someone to maintain your home -- you won't be cutting your own lawn when you are 75 most likely. You will need an auto until you are 75 or in reasonable health to drive. You may want to live in assisted care when you are over 80 and not be dependent on your children for your housing and over-site/ or care.

It's is not cheap to get old -- my Mother is 92, sold her condo 16 years ago and her rent in an assisted care facility is $1,800 a month!


My Grandmother is the same age. She was living in a retirement apartment complex for the last 14 years. Last month, she fell AGAIN and the apartments refused to allow her to stay. Her rent there was around $1,500 per month. Now that she requires more care, we moved her into a different facility at a nice rate of only $3,500 per month.

She owned her own home. In fact, she owned 2 of them outright and lived between them until she was unable to be by herself.

MiamiBoyz 10-13-2014 10:13 AM

It's the American way of living...work your ass off and sacrifice your entire life (when young) so you can enjoy seeing the world and travel when you are old...sure, I have been to over 25 countries. I have hiked the Inca trail in Peru, I have stayed in the Amazon in Brazil, I have hiked volcanoes in Guatemala, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua. I have done all these things while I am young and physically could enjoy them to the max.

Most Americans (traditional types - certainly not the most GFY'ers) postpone actually "living life" thinking that they will do all of that after they retire at 65. I don't know how many never make it to 65 (car accident, cancer, heart attack) or are in such poor health that they can't do those things.

You can have all the money in the bank you can dream of but if you are too ill to use it or you don't even make it the age to use it then was your life wasted? I think it was if you lived dreaming of a future that you never got to.

JA$ON 10-13-2014 10:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252067)
I see these commercials trying to scare me into saving money for retirement and some say you need $1 million in the bank to live until eight-five or some such non sense.

Looking at my in-laws, they are both in their seventies, their house is paid off, their cars are paid off, and they have no credit card debt. They have $100k cash in the bank, a few investments, have more or less no bills other than the regular power and utilities. They live off of social security, have few needs, and seem to have a positive cash flow every month.

Did I miss something?

what you need depends on what your expenses are. If you have a small house (paid off) and live modestly, 1mm should be more than enough. If you have multiple homes, travel the world , eat out every night etc....you need a hell of a lot more than that. Also, if the plan is to live off of what one has vs having money to leave to your kids, that changes everything as well.

math is math...if they have positive cash flow every month, they are fine. Assuming nothing changes expense wise or no major medical bills pop up

Harmon 10-13-2014 10:30 AM

Why is this hard? Poor people can live poor. Rich people want to live richly. Ford Escape vs Mercedes Benz.

This speaks volumes about OP :2 cents:

mineistaken 10-13-2014 10:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252067)
I see these commercials trying to scare me into saving money for retirement and some say you need $1 million in the bank to live until eight-five or some such non sense.

Looking at my in-laws, they are both in their seventies, their house is paid off, their cars are paid off, and they have no credit card debt. They have $100k cash in the bank, a few investments, have more or less no bills other than the regular power and utilities. They live off of social security, have few needs, and seem to have a positive cash flow every month.

Did I miss something?

People retire with 0$ so no you are not missing anything.

Antonio 10-13-2014 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252067)
.........
Did I miss something?

The pot growing operation in their basement?

420 10-13-2014 10:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252067)
I see these commercials trying to scare me into saving money for retirement and some say you need $1 million in the bank to live until eight-five or some such non sense.

You can get by on 100k but you'll have to reuse all your shopping bags. You know, to wipe your ass because tp is expensive.

Sid70 10-13-2014 11:04 AM

Why do you need a commercial to get scared?

Rochard 10-13-2014 11:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antonio (Post 20252229)
The pot growing operation in their basement?

They don't have basements in Southern California. (Come to think of it, I've never owned a house with a basement.)

DWB 10-13-2014 11:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MiamiBoyz (Post 20252189)
It's the American way of living...work your ass off and sacrifice your entire life (when young) so you can enjoy seeing the world and travel when you are old...sure, I have been to over 25 countries. I have hiked the Inca trail in Peru, I have stayed in the Amazon in Brazil, I have hiked volcanoes in Guatemala, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua. I have done all these things while I am young and physically could enjoy them to the max.

Most Americans (traditional types - certainly not the most GFY'ers) postpone actually "living life" thinking that they will do all of that after they retire at 65. I don't know how many never make it to 65 (car accident, cancer, heart attack) or are in such poor health that they can't do those things.

You can have all the money in the bank you can dream of but if you are too ill to use it or you don't even make it the age to use it then was your life wasted? I think it was if you lived dreaming of a future that you never got to.

I met an old man (American) on a bus in the Andes Mountains about 15 years ago. Dude was in his early 70s, very cool guy. We chatted for a few hours and he told me to go and do everything I wanted to do now while I was young, because it was bullshit waiting until I was older because you can't enjoy it as much and it's harder on your body as you age. Not to mention, there is no guarantee you will live to be older anyway. He regretted not doing things when he was young.

Vendzilla 10-13-2014 11:57 AM

I wouldn't trust Social Security, most of the money in that account is IOU's from the government, it's called the National Debt. What, did you think that all came from China?

I'm glad I almost have my house paid off! Should be by next year!

arock10 10-13-2014 12:15 PM

It is going to be considerably harder for younger people now then older people now to retire.

Pensions no longer exist
Interest rates are flat
No more huge appreciation of real estate over your life time
People are renting longer and saving less

Also remember that due to inflation a million dollars cash now is going to be worth way the fuck less in the future.

Yea, it's gonna be a mess in the future especially once everything is automated

arock10 10-13-2014 12:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vendzilla (Post 20252314)
I wouldn't trust Social Security, most of the money in that account is IOU's from the government, it's called the National Debt. What, did you think that all came from China?

I'm glad I almost have my house paid off! Should be by next year!

Paying off your house right now is the worst move you can do. Interest rates are at all time lows, pulling out all that paid off equity and investing it is pretty much what people need to do these days.

Vendzilla 10-13-2014 12:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arock10 (Post 20252358)
Paying off your house right now is the worst move you can do. Interest rates are at all time lows, pulling out all that paid off equity and investing it is pretty much what people need to do these days.

The interest doesn't amount to much, we only owe a small amount on the condo we live in. We are planning to get some land and build a second home. A place we can retire. Also looking at getting a RV and write off the interest on that on taxes. The IRS considers any interest paid on a motor home or even some tent trailers as interest you can write off!

Already have money in investments and getting more. I'm looking at a big stock purchase right now.

SilentKnight 10-13-2014 12:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252067)
I see these commercials trying to scare me into saving money for retirement and some say you need $1 million in the bank to live until eight-five or some such non sense.

Looking at my in-laws, they are both in their seventies, their house is paid off, their cars are paid off, and they have no credit card debt. They have $100k cash in the bank, a few investments, have more or less no bills other than the regular power and utilities. They live off of social security, have few needs, and seem to have a positive cash flow every month.

Did I miss something?

A TV commercial with an agenda?

What's up with that?

Wizzo 10-13-2014 12:46 PM

Alot comes down to personal lifestyle choice, for example my parents saved quite a bit, now in their late 70s they still have the freedom to whatever the choose to do.

For example, They had owned their home which I grew up in, but after Katrina the refugees that moved in the area made it go downhill and now is one of the crappier parts of Houston. So even though when they retired had no plans of ever moving they decided to move to a much nicer(safer) area and had the money to upgrade.

When they moved it's a gated community, so they decided to buy a golfcart, again never planned for it, but had the means. Now in their new community, they take a number of trips each year with the other retired folks there, never planned it but do have the freedom to do it.

Their life wouldn't have been the same without having the means to roll with changes and so I want to make sure I have enough to have that freedom when I retire.

Harmon 10-13-2014 12:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vendzilla (Post 20252366)
The interest doesn't amount to much, we only owe a small amount on the condo we live in. We are planning to get some land and build a second home. A place we can retire. Also looking at getting a RV and write off the interest on that on taxes. The IRS considers any interest paid on a motor home or even some tent trailers as interest you can write off!

Already have money in investments and getting more. I'm looking at a big stock purchase right now.

This is so hysterically embarassing on so many levels

Sid70 10-13-2014 12:49 PM

Many well packed folks in this thread.

Rochard 10-13-2014 12:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vendzilla (Post 20252314)
I'm glad I almost have my house paid off! Should be by next year!

This seems to be a large part of it - owning your own house. Housing is your biggest expensive, and by the time you retire you should own your own house free and clear of any banks.

editeur 10-13-2014 01:22 PM

What happens in US if you have mortgage unpaid or just no house at all (you've been renting all your life) and no money saved in bank when you're in pension age?

Barry-xlovecam 10-13-2014 01:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by editeur (Post 20252442)
What happens in US if you have mortgage unpaid or just no house at all (you've been renting all your life) and no money saved in bank when you're in pension age?

If you paid into social security, worked most of your life, you might get a government pension of $1,200 to $2,800 a month (about) depending on your income.

Relentless 10-13-2014 01:54 PM

And if social security ever goes away... or fails to keep pace with rampant inflation?

Then your grandparents become your new rent-free tenants.

arock10 10-13-2014 02:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vendzilla (Post 20252366)
The interest doesn't amount to much, we only owe a small amount on the condo we live in. We are planning to get some land and build a second home. A place we can retire. Also looking at getting a RV and write off the interest on that on taxes. The IRS considers any interest paid on a motor home or even some tent trailers as interest you can write off!

Already have money in investments and getting more. I'm looking at a big stock purchase right now.

yes, the interest doesn't amount to much, that was the entire point I was making...

Bryan G 10-13-2014 02:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MiamiBoyz (Post 20252189)
It's the American way of living...work your ass off and sacrifice your entire life (when young) so you can enjoy seeing the world and travel when you are old...sure, I have been to over 25 countries. I have hiked the Inca trail in Peru, I have stayed in the Amazon in Brazil, I have hiked volcanoes in Guatemala, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua. I have done all these things while I am young and physically could enjoy them to the max.

Most Americans (traditional types - certainly not the most GFY'ers) postpone actually "living life" thinking that they will do all of that after they retire at 65. I don't know how many never make it to 65 (car accident, cancer, heart attack) or are in such poor health that they can't do those things.

You can have all the money in the bank you can dream of but if you are too ill to use it or you don't even make it the age to use it then was your life wasted? I think it was if you lived dreaming of a future that you never got to.

I agree with what you are saying and I too have travelled many places around the world and enjoyed myself and I will continue to do so. However, I also feel its important to be putting money aside for when you are older. I have a daughter now and it makes me happy knowing that I will be able to pay for her education amd more when she gets to that age. As you get older your priorities change.

Dead 10-13-2014 03:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arock10 (Post 20252358)
Paying off your house right now is the worst move you can do. Interest rates are at all time lows, pulling out all that paid off equity and investing it is pretty much what people need to do these days.


I understand it is the cheapest money to borrow on, but it is still debt...but what a great feeling to sit back and not pay a mortgage company every month. I have a little under a year on a ten year mortgage and am looking forward to paying it back to the house and doing upgrades. Free of any loans. Bettering my investment so to speak.

Dead 10-13-2014 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MiamiBoyz (Post 20252189)
It's the American way of living...work your ass off and sacrifice your entire life (when young) so you can enjoy seeing the world and travel when you are old...sure, I have been to over 25 countries. I have hiked the Inca trail in Peru, I have stayed in the Amazon in Brazil, I have hiked volcanoes in Guatemala, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua. I have done all these things while I am young and physically could enjoy them to the max.

Most Americans (traditional types - certainly not the most GFY'ers) postpone actually "living life" thinking that they will do all of that after they retire at 65. I don't know how many never make it to 65 (car accident, cancer, heart attack) or are in such poor health that they can't do those things.

You can have all the money in the bank you can dream of but if you are too ill to use it or you don't even make it the age to use it then was your life wasted? I think it was if you lived dreaming of a future that you never got to.

You are very fortunate to have had this opportunity afforded to you, I have been working my ass and investing every cent back into the family and business, with the occasional break ;)

ClickCastX 10-13-2014 03:14 PM

No debt = Freedom

woj 10-13-2014 04:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ClickCastX (Post 20252565)
No debt = Freedom

what's wrong with borrowing at 4%, investing that to get 8%, so as a result making 4% profit on money you never had in the first place?

Vendzilla 10-13-2014 04:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252416)
This seems to be a large part of it - owning your own house. Housing is your biggest expensive, and by the time you retire you should own your own house free and clear of any banks.

My mom owns her house outright, she has no bills and has a couple incomes. She has money in bank. She lives her life the way she wants and is pretty happy. I love when I visit her and she shows me pictures from her latest trip she took!

Quote:

Originally Posted by arock10 (Post 20252487)
yes, the interest doesn't amount to much, that was the entire point I was making...

If the interest were higher, then the tax return would be better, but it's not, so we are paying it off. I'm hoping to pay off a second property before I retire so we can have the first one as an income property and live very comfortable!

Rochard 10-13-2014 04:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ClickCastX (Post 20252565)
No debt = Freedom

I had some credit card problems that took me down the rabbit hole into bankruptcy before I got into porn. I have a CC now but pay it off every month - more to help keep credit going than anything else.

We owe money on the house and the condo, two cars, but that's it.

arock10 10-13-2014 05:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Vendzilla (Post 20252618)


If the interest were higher, then the tax return would be better, but it's not, so we are paying it off. I'm hoping to pay off a second property before I retire so we can have the first one as an income property and live very comfortable!

Sigh, nevermind

Also if you think a tax refund is a good thing that's part of the problem

directfiesta 10-13-2014 06:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arock10 (Post 20252358)
Paying off your house right now is the worst move you can do. Interest rates are at all time lows, pulling out all that paid off equity and investing it is pretty much what people need to do these days.

Can`t agree more ....

Building ( multiplex ) next door to me was for sale ( 525K ) . I remortgaged 2 other properties to pull out 100K at 2.94 % ( tax deductible ).
The 100K became the cash down on 475K I paid for the new property ( 20% so no insurance premium on mortgage ) .
Income ( rents ) minus expenses ( interest, taxes, maintenance ) will net me about 13K a year . Return on the 100K : 13 % . Cost : 2.94% : profit before taxes : 10.06 %

Notice I do not factor in any increase of value of the property, which here as been about 3% a year ( 14K )

We all have a choice :
Either we work for money .... or the money works for us :2 cents:

bronco67 10-13-2014 07:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 20252067)
I see these commercials trying to scare me into saving money for retirement and some say you need $1 million in the bank to live until eight-five or some such non sense.

Looking at my in-laws, they are both in their seventies, their house is paid off, their cars are paid off, and they have no credit card debt. They have $100k cash in the bank, a few investments, have more or less no bills other than the regular power and utilities. They live off of social security, have few needs, and seem to have a positive cash flow every month.

Did I miss something?

They(and I'm not sure exactly who they is) try to brainwash everyone into thinking you need to have the same money to live on when you retire. My mom has had about $75k last for a quite a long time, along with her social security and small pension.

She doesn't live like a pimp, but she gets by just fine.

That said, I'd like to live more comfortably but I don't see myself ever retiring because I love what I do and will do it until I'm physically unable. Also, I have a brand new daughter and I'll be worrying more about wasting money on college in 18 years.

shahan.PRO 10-14-2014 08:09 AM

am not sure about us..
but in malaysia lots of people are really dependent for their pensions from government ..
I am not talking about families who own Mercedes (RRP + 300% tax) or similar, but families with regular income.

shahan.PRO 10-14-2014 08:18 AM

so there are people who don't have any additional income except their salary, so some of them are kind of surviving

PAR 10-14-2014 08:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bryan G (Post 20252075)
All depends on how you want to spend your retirement. Do you want to just be getting by or do you want to have a ton of cash to travel and help out your kids and your grandkids.

Also depends on:
Your health, Dr. bills and pills add up fast.
Where you will be living. (sell/rent out your house and move to a smaller town where the daily cost of living is lower.)

Monthly cost today will not be the same as your monthly cost 20 years from now.
Example: It would cost me $20 to fill my gas tank years ago and now I'm lucky if it cost 3 times that.

michael.kickass 10-14-2014 08:39 AM

It's all bullshit!

Sid70 10-14-2014 08:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by directfiesta (Post 20252718)
Can`t agree more ....

Building ( multiplex ) next door to me was for sale ( 525K ) . I remortgaged 2 other properties to pull out 100K at 2.94 % ( tax deductible ).
The 100K became the cash down on 475K I paid for the new property ( 20% so no insurance premium on mortgage ) .
Income ( rents ) minus expenses ( interest, taxes, maintenance ) will net me about 13K a year . Return on the 100K : 13 % . Cost : 2.94% : profit before taxes : 10.06 %

Notice I do not factor in any increase of value of the property, which here as been about 3% a year ( 14K )

We all have a choice :
Either we work for money .... or the money works for us :2 cents:

:2 cents::2 cents::2 cents::2 cents: Genius in da house, tell us more :thumbsup

Sid70 10-14-2014 08:53 AM

Healthcare wise:

If we talk medical bills at some EU countries people are really protected and live without a doubt they would get help if there is a need. Of course, they pay higher tax but somehow Danish or Swedish bus drivers do very well even comparing to programmers income wise, so all the social layers are covered up.

It looks not so bright for the Eastern/Central EU - some would get help on a smaller scale, no exciting but something.

Ukraine / Russia, ex FSU they keep it low with bribes and "free" medicine where all the patients have to pay a nurse daily to keep the diapers dry or water heated.

All the Asian sites - FUCK knows but everyone says its cheap to live but still takes $$ to get taken care of.

How much $$ is that monthly? Fuck knows, seems like in the Eastern/Central EU USD2-3k would be matching sorta survival level for a couple.

arock10 10-14-2014 09:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sid70 (Post 20253193)
:2 cents::2 cents::2 cents::2 cents: Genius in da house, tell us more :thumbsup

It is actually pretty simple and straight forward, people just don't understand or know how to use debt to make money. It is simply maximizing your ROI and using leverage is one of the best ways to optimize that

Everyone that is busy paying off their house is saving 2-4% interest... the stock market went up 24% last year and (other then this week) is still up considerably more then 2-4%. And that is just the stock market

Of course, the closer you are to retirement (or in retirement), the less risky you should be. But if you are taking out a home equity loan and using that to invest in other real estate, well, thats swapping equity in one building for equity in another which is pretty safe.

Just gotta hedge interest rates rising some...

Sid70 10-14-2014 09:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arock10 (Post 20253253)
It is actually pretty simple and straight forward, people just don't understand or know how to use debt to make money. It is simply maximizing your ROI and using leverage is one of the best ways to optimize that

Everyone that is busy paying off their house is saving 2-4% interest... the stock market went up 24% last year and (other then this week) is still up considerably more then 2-4%. And that is just the stock market

Of course, the closer you are to retirement (or in retirement), the less risky you should be. But if you are taking out a home equity loan and using that to invest in other real estate, well, thats swapping equity in one building for equity in another which is pretty safe.

Just gotta hedge interest rates rising some...

4/5 of my income goes to shitter. Savings, investments???


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