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Something Ken joked about in another thread got me to thinking.
Ever see the TV show "Shark Tank"? One of the sharks is a billionaire named Kevin O'Leary. In an interview he said he put his kids thru college, paid all related expenses, and bought them a car when they graduated. Once they were out on their own and working, he would not give them any more money. If they asked, the answer was No. He told them "figure it out".
My parents were not wealthy. In my 20s I made several poor money decisions and sometimes lived beyond my means. I recall buying a new car that I could barely afford, spending too much money on clothes, etc, and sometimes not being able to pay rent or stretching a few dollars for food and gas until the next paycheck. I simply didn't manage my money sensibly. I went to my parents for help, and they helped me out (just this one last time), even though they had other kids at home and their own tight budgets to deal with.
Thinking back, I feel bad about that.
I got scolded several times, but I wish they had told me sooner to "figure it out" - get a cheaper car, move to a cheaper apt, get a part-time weekend job, do whatever it takes. And start saving consistently.
I eventually went thru some rough spots and had to make some sacrifices in order to sleep better at night and be truly independent.
But I see Kevin O'Leary's point. Don't expect your parents/family to always bail you out.
Thoughts?
Ever see the TV show "Shark Tank"? One of the sharks is a billionaire named Kevin O'Leary. In an interview he said he put his kids thru college, paid all related expenses, and bought them a car when they graduated. Once they were out on their own and working, he would not give them any more money. If they asked, the answer was No. He told them "figure it out".
My parents were not wealthy. In my 20s I made several poor money decisions and sometimes lived beyond my means. I recall buying a new car that I could barely afford, spending too much money on clothes, etc, and sometimes not being able to pay rent or stretching a few dollars for food and gas until the next paycheck. I simply didn't manage my money sensibly. I went to my parents for help, and they helped me out (just this one last time), even though they had other kids at home and their own tight budgets to deal with.
Thinking back, I feel bad about that.
I eventually went thru some rough spots and had to make some sacrifices in order to sleep better at night and be truly independent.
But I see Kevin O'Leary's point. Don't expect your parents/family to always bail you out.
Thoughts?