Archive for May, 2008

Your definition of being “rich”

When i was growing up I considered myself poor. I realized i wasn’t the poorest kid in the world, but I wasn’t provided with alot of the things some of my friends and classmates were. I grew up in rented houses or trailers, my parents had used rusted beaters for the primary car, some years we didn’t have a phone or cable, I never had the newest stuff, or name brand clothes.

Kmart lay-away was a good thing, as if something was put on law-away, I just new that eventually I would get it, if my parents ever paid it off. Money was always tight, especially towards the end of my mom’s pay period. Every other Friday was payday, so by the end of that 2nd week, food was tight and payday was like Christmas - that meant groceries and maybe a few bucks for me and my brother to do as we please.

I used to think my friends or people I knew were “rich” if they had the most popular clothes and toys, their parents lived in nice houses in subdivisions and drove rust-free cars that were brand new. I always wanted to be able to buy the baseball cards, or bike, or just have a phone, or just be given a few bucks when asked, or just be taken to school or practice in a nice car that didn’t announce its presence because of a hole in the muffler. Anyway, you get the point. As a kid, I just wanted to have what I perceived all my friends and kids I wanted to be like had. Just new and nice stuff.

The amazing thing now is that I realize that the majority of those things I thought I always wanted, because it would mean that I was “rich”, well, for the most part, I don’t really care if I have them. Don’t get me wrong, I live a good life and have nice, new possessions. But, I also realize that now, the majority of my friends and people I know, have the exact same thing also.

The sad part to me is that I realize most people buy these possessions to be like their friends, or like their co-workers, to live a similar life as their neighbors, or as people they know, regardless of how much money they actually have. I mean, isn’t this the basis for the current mortgate crisis and isn’t that why people don’t save anything? People make $100, they spend $200. They buy that house and those cars, essentially to be like the others - and that’s exactly what happens, they become like everyone else, in debt with tons of financial obligations. Just because people have a nice house, and the new cars, and go on these nice trips, and “appear” to be “rich” - they aren’t. They are in debt, they are one mishap away from being financially screwed and needing to buy more debt to survive. All they have bought, is more years worth of stressful working to pay these bills. They will never get ahead, but, they will live as good a life as the next person.

I wonder what % of the people I thought were “rich” when I was a kid, actually had money. I now know those possessions don’t equal wealth. For the majority of americans, those possessions equal debt. But hey, that’s the american way.

Personally, I will feel like I am “rich” when my net wealth grows at a pace that not only sustains a life style for myself that gives me all I would ever want, but also grows itself, to ensure that I only get “wealthier”. So I won’t work because I have to to sustain my lifestyle, I work because it’s something that I choose to do. Based on where I am at today, I have already reached the hopes I had when I was a kid, I have everything I thought I always wanted. So, I have had to re-issue new goals, I don’t want to be on the hook to anyone for anything. Once I am at that place, well, then I will be rich.

A change in approach, let’s see what happens

I started this blog over a year ago, and thought I would make it a blog about my business dealings. As someone in the online marketing field, you get alot of people who have blogs that detail their thoughts. These blogs share some tips and tricks, but mostly just talk about how they make alot of money and try to help the author build an identify to make even more. Hey, more power to those guys, I read alot of them to pick up some tips/tricks, so I cannot bash em. However, that’s just not me. I don’t ever want to be “known” in the online marketing world. I kinda like keeping a lower profile and just going about my business.

So anyway, after wasting about a year not posting much on this blog, I decided to turn it into something that I like to talk about and want to write about for anyone who wants to read about it. Personal finance and investing as an individual. I wrote a few posts over the last year about various stocks I purchased, etc. But I basically want to chronicle the way I handle money as well as the things I do as an investor.

I am not going to lie to you - I am a pretty big tight ass. I have a nice house, a nice suv for me and an accord for my wife, a couple flat screen tvs, basically everything I want, but I don’t overspend, I don’t “desire” to live like I am “rich”. I just want to go about my business, but build one freakin’ big net worth. I am well on my way, and in this blog I intend to discuss my philosophy for how I got here, and what I intend to do to ensure that every big decision I make, is aimed at growing my overall net worth.

So, for the 3 people who actually visited this blog over the last year (that may not be accurate as I haven’t been checking my stats daily) - but for you visitors, thanks for staying so loyal, and hopefully you enjoy the shift in focus. And for any new readers/visitors, hopefully you don’t feel that reading this is a waste of time.