To struggle when hope is banished,
To live when life's salt is gone,
To dwell in a dream that's vanished,
To endure and go calmly on.
-Ben Johnson
JUST SOME TALK
Saturday, April 14, 2018
Sunday, February 11, 2018
GO EAGLES!!!
E.A.G.L.E.S. EAGLES!!!
The Philadelphia Eagles are the 2018 Superbowl Champions!!
Congratulations Nick, Doug, Carson, and the whole Eagles organization!! Well done.
Thank You.
Let's do it again! 2019??!!!!
The Philadelphia Eagles are the 2018 Superbowl Champions!!
Congratulations Nick, Doug, Carson, and the whole Eagles organization!! Well done.
Thank You.
Let's do it again! 2019??!!!!
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
Movie Recommendation
Hey folks.
Movie: Collateral Beauty
I thought it was good.
I have four pet fish that I named Love, Time, and Death. The fourth one, not a part of the movie I call Mystery.
Love and Mystery stand out a little while Time and Death are only identified by not being Love or Mystery.
Good fish. Good movie.
If I was middle-class I would buy the dvd.
Peace.
B.O.P.
Movie: Collateral Beauty
I thought it was good.
I have four pet fish that I named Love, Time, and Death. The fourth one, not a part of the movie I call Mystery.
Love and Mystery stand out a little while Time and Death are only identified by not being Love or Mystery.
Good fish. Good movie.
If I was middle-class I would buy the dvd.
Peace.
B.O.P.
Saturday, July 8, 2017
Below
THE BLOG
Living Beneath Your Means: The Foundation of Financial
Independence
05/19/2015 10:16 pm ET | Updated May 20, 2015
132
- Bob LotichFounder, SeedTime.com
The whole concept of living beneath your means is so simple
that it's virtually "old school". There's nothing high-minded about
it, and no product to sell to help make it happen. For that reason, it's a
concept that is generally ignored in favor of more technical financial applications.
And yet it is virtually the foundation of financial independence.
There are a number of ways in which living beneath your
means can virtually revolutionize your entire financial life.
Debt -- The Inevitable Result of Living Above Your Means
There are various strategies available to enable people to get
out of debt. All of them ultimately point toward living beneath your means,
although they will generally use much more technical language, as well as more
advanced sounding concepts.
The reason should be obvious, until you can begin living
beneath your means, you have virtually zero chance of ever getting out of debt.
In fact, it's essential that you recognize that the inverse
of living beneath your means is the very cause of being in debt in the first
place. Debt is the result of living above your means. If you earn $50,000 per
year, but you spend $55,000, you will add $5,000 to your debt each and every
year.
The only way to break that cycle is to reverse the trend. If
you can reduce your spending to $45,000 per year, you will have the funds
available to begin paying down your debt. But that reduction must occur in
order for you to make any progress.
Chasing Higher Income Can Be a Catch-22
It's a common belief that financial independence will
ultimately come as a result of a higher income. That can prove to be true but only
if you are successful in keeping your spending level as your income rises.
This is often the opposite of what happens in reality. A
higher income more typically leads to lifestyle inflation -- your cost
of living rises in proportion to your income. The end result is that income
never outstrips expenses, no matter how high your income goes.
This is why people often feel that they aren't any better
off even with a higher income. This isn't to say that increasing income is in
any way a negative thing. But it does have to be properly managed, otherwise it
will not have a positive impact on your overall financial situation.
The Less You Spend, The More You Can Save
The most obvious benefit of living beneath your means is
that it creates the ability to save money. Savings provide you with a cash
cushion, that enables you to weather the storms of life, and to do so with less
worry. But it also keeps you out of debt. After all, if you have sufficient
liquid savings, you don't need to borrow money.
True Prosperity is Defined By How Much Money You Have,
Not How Much You Earn
Though wealth in America is often measured by income, true
prosperity is really a matter of how much money that you actually have. We can
think of this as your surplus; and if you have enough of it you will
have more control over your life and your future direction.
Financial independence is typically found in a strategy that
steadily increases savings, which can then be invested to produce even more
income. A perfect financial strategy is one in which investment income steadily
grows until it fully replaces your earned income, and you can retire.
But none of that will happen until you first begin living
beneath your means.
The Many Benefits of Living Beneath Your Means
Even apart from growing wealth and retiring, living beneath
your means offers a number of attractive benefits:
Not being trapped in a job. People often stay in jobs
they don't like because they are heavily dependent upon the level of income.
But if you can live on less than you earn, you'll be free to take a lower
paying but more satisfying job elsewhere.
You will become a natural saver. So many people are
in debt because they never learned how to save money. But if you live beneath
your means, you will always be putting money into savings, because that's what
you do with money that you don't spend. Saving money is an underestimated survival
skill. And if you have savings - and particularly if you don't -- you probably
already know that life is better when you have a fully stocked bank account.
Being liquid. As a result of living beneath your
means, you will always have extra money. This will afford you the freedom to go
where you want and to do what you please in most circumstances. This will not
be possible without the surplus that living beneath your means provides.
You'll have less stress in your life. When you have
extra money in your budget, extra money in savings, and little or no debt,
you'll worry less and sleep better at night. You'll probably even work more
efficiently at your job, because you won't have concerns about not being able
to pay your bills.
Living beneath your means is sort of like going on a diet.
You know that there's something good about the lifestyle, and especially about
what awaits you when you stay on course. But you have to make that initial
decision to make the changes necessary in order to enable you to do it.
And once you do, you'll quickly realize that living beneath
your means is the true path to financial independence, whatever your income
level may be.
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
Wood
Woodman,
Spare That Tree
By George
Pope Morris (1802 – 1864)
Woodman,
spare that tree!
Touch not a
single bough!
In youth it
sheltered me.
And I’ll
protect it now.
‘Twas my
forefather’s hand
That placed
it near his cot;
There,
woodman, let it stand,
Thy axe shall
harm it not!
That old
familiar tree,
Whose glory
and renown
Are spread
o’er the land and sea, -
And wouldst
thou hew it down?
Woodman,
forbear thy stroke!
Cut not its
earth-bound ties;
O, spare that
aged oak,
Now towering
to the skies!
When but an
idle boy
I sought its
grateful shade;
In all their
gushing joy
Here, too, my
sisters played.
My mother
kissed me here;
My father
pressed my hand-
Forgive this
foolish tear,
But let that
old oak stand!
My
heart-strings round thee cling,
Close as thy bark,
old friend!
Here shall
the wild-bird sing,
And still thy
branches bend.
Old tree! the
storm still brave!
And, woodman,
leave the spot;
While I’ve a
hand to save,
Thy axe shall
harm it not.
Tuesday, May 30, 2017
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