I don't have fuck all for savings. I bought a house at 21 just before COVID and I'm basically fucked from the inflation and everything else going downhill, plus a few unfortunate accidents. I have been living from pay check to pay check until very recently. New job at a fortune 500 but I'm in a manufacturing facility, only making 23/hr. I do have my contributions to 401k maxed out for the match at 6.5% but idk what else to do atm.
I'm trying to build something now but I'm starting from scratch and I'm going to be living like a pauper for god knows how long. If anyone has any kind of advice for someone starting from the bottom with not a lot of extra disposable income I would appreciate from the bottom of my heart.
Stop contributing to a 401k. You need that money now and the dollar could very well be useless by the time you are able to withdraw it. Inflation is already stealing ~4% of it daily.
Buy bitcoin if you want to do something for retirement. Not altcoins. Bitcoin.
It's really difficult, I've been in my house for 12 years. When I bought, I thought the prices were absolute peak insanity... but I've continually been wrong.
Even the advice I have is tainted by pretty much lucking into a company that pays okayish (that I've been laid off from 4x but never stayed that way - getting hired back on in different functions/areas).
My biggest frustration is that my 2bedroom apartment before I moved was $690 a month and just with property taxes I pay $425 a month to essentially rent from the local town.
My wife works, dual income really helped. All my bonuses and commission went into the house and we paid it off in 9 years. It took her 6 months to find a job when her company laid her off last year, not having a mortgage payment every month meant we could weather it alright - still food, kids, limited travel to visit family, insurance...
The amortization table skews heavily towards interest as you start paying the loan, getting ahead of it helps build equity much more quickly. 3% of my payment went towards principal the first year, and by year 7-8 60-70% went towards principal, which helps snowball.
If there's someone you can trust to live with you and contribute... it'd help. A lot of people want to pick up extra jobs, but I'd much rather control spending and not kill myself (cheap hobbies, fishing, computer games, exercise, cooking). I drive an suv that's almost 20 years old with over 200,000 miles and plan on buying something pre-2019 when it dies.
That $20 / hr seems like what they are paying all the manufacturing guys these days. The only ones making more are unionized boomers. Maybe joining a union could be the solution.
I'm against unions overall, but not going to lie, if you have the connections to get one, then union jobs can be pretty sweet. More money to do less work, plus benefits. The only downside is sometimes the union pushes their luck too much and the business has to shut down, leaving everyone on the street.
Take the cash where you can get it. I'm assuming your company doesn't have a union but a lot of military industrial complex companies have unions for all the touch labor.
If you're in manufacturing I would suggest trying to learn toolmaking by whatever way possible. Best case scenario there's a training program at your plant or someone willing to show you the ropes. Toolmakers get paid big bucks.
I don't have fuck all for savings. I bought a house at 21 just before COVID and I'm basically fucked from the inflation and everything else going downhill, plus a few unfortunate accidents. I have been living from pay check to pay check until very recently. New job at a fortune 500 but I'm in a manufacturing facility, only making 23/hr. I do have my contributions to 401k maxed out for the match at 6.5% but idk what else to do atm.
I'm trying to build something now but I'm starting from scratch and I'm going to be living like a pauper for god knows how long. If anyone has any kind of advice for someone starting from the bottom with not a lot of extra disposable income I would appreciate from the bottom of my heart.
Stop contributing to a 401k. You need that money now and the dollar could very well be useless by the time you are able to withdraw it. Inflation is already stealing ~4% of it daily.
Buy bitcoin if you want to do something for retirement. Not altcoins. Bitcoin.
Hi hello can you hear me all the way back in 2010
It's really difficult, I've been in my house for 12 years. When I bought, I thought the prices were absolute peak insanity... but I've continually been wrong.
Even the advice I have is tainted by pretty much lucking into a company that pays okayish (that I've been laid off from 4x but never stayed that way - getting hired back on in different functions/areas).
My biggest frustration is that my 2bedroom apartment before I moved was $690 a month and just with property taxes I pay $425 a month to essentially rent from the local town.
My wife works, dual income really helped. All my bonuses and commission went into the house and we paid it off in 9 years. It took her 6 months to find a job when her company laid her off last year, not having a mortgage payment every month meant we could weather it alright - still food, kids, limited travel to visit family, insurance...
The amortization table skews heavily towards interest as you start paying the loan, getting ahead of it helps build equity much more quickly. 3% of my payment went towards principal the first year, and by year 7-8 60-70% went towards principal, which helps snowball.
If there's someone you can trust to live with you and contribute... it'd help. A lot of people want to pick up extra jobs, but I'd much rather control spending and not kill myself (cheap hobbies, fishing, computer games, exercise, cooking). I drive an suv that's almost 20 years old with over 200,000 miles and plan on buying something pre-2019 when it dies.
That $20 / hr seems like what they are paying all the manufacturing guys these days. The only ones making more are unionized boomers. Maybe joining a union could be the solution.
I'm against unions overall, but not going to lie, if you have the connections to get one, then union jobs can be pretty sweet. More money to do less work, plus benefits. The only downside is sometimes the union pushes their luck too much and the business has to shut down, leaving everyone on the street.
The downside is all the worthless niggers they can't legally fire. You end up doing their work for no extra thanks.
Take the cash where you can get it. I'm assuming your company doesn't have a union but a lot of military industrial complex companies have unions for all the touch labor.
Never forget the names and faces of the ones who did this to you.
If you're in manufacturing I would suggest trying to learn toolmaking by whatever way possible. Best case scenario there's a training program at your plant or someone willing to show you the ropes. Toolmakers get paid big bucks.