desertdog71
Girthy Member
$24K pays all my bills for a family of 4. Guess its where I live and the whole never borrowing money thing.
That's good... No way that'd work here unless you had your house paid off completely and were eating canned beans for dinner. Even then...$24K pays all my bills for a family of 4. Guess its where I live and the whole never borrowing money thing.
That's good... No way that'd work here unless you had your house paid off completely and were eating canned beans for dinner. Even then...
But of course, I live in San Diego. It's expensive, but I have no intention of moving away from SoCal again.
Yup, I had a brand new 2-bedroom place in Lancaster, PA for the low-low price of $640/month. Had a room for the drums and everything. But, I was bored to tears 9 months out of the year, and frozen for the other 3.Yup. It is expensive to live here but that is because lots of people want to live here.
If you're good living in a place where $500 will pay for a three bedroom place, that's great! I'm happy for you.
I would be miserable in the places where that's true. And flying an airplane around 1,000 hours a year wouldn't make up for the other 7,760 hours where I'd be miserable.
Close to her parents, close to mine, both of them were over today to help with plumbing. What more do you need to know? (It's far less mysterious than it looks.)Very difficult to make it work on regional FO pay, though (some manage to make it happen mysteriously, but @Autothrust Blue has to live in Camarillo!).
I live in Kailua-Kona. My wife and I bring home 42,000 a year. We have 3 kids and our monthly income is $100 too much to qualify for food stamps. However my kids eat well, our QOL is high, beachs, county pools and libraries are free. We shop carefully, live in a condo near the ocean, take good care of our vehicles and still afford to eat out or go to a movie once a month or so. And I'm starting my PPL next month. Its called budgeting and living within your means.
You should write a book on budgeting with a family. Im sure many folks would like to know how you're accomplishing this...especially in a place like Hawaii. I know I would
My guess is your vehicles are paid for? The cars are big expenses with us. If they were both paid off, Id be living like 1980s Pablo Escobar right now.
Heh. I used to say that when I was making half what I do.
For most people - not all, but most - the more you make, the more you tend to spend. I think the trick is keeping it proportional.
Our cars ARE paid for. An '03 and an '06, not new but decemtYou should write a book on budgeting with a family. Im sure many folks would like to know how you're accomplishing this...especially in a place like Hawaii. I know I would
My guess is your vehicles are paid for? The cars are big expenses with us. If they were both paid off, Id be living like 1980s Pablo Escobar right now.
Apparently, he did. LOL
For whatever reason Tony never took the chance at this career. That's fine, but that tells me he's cut from a different cloth than myself. I pretty much had no choice, my passion for flying was so strong. I also had the confidence to give it a try, knowing that if it didn't work out I could go back to my previous career. But for somebody that never had any skin in the game to continuously lecture us on what it's like being a professional pilot, I find it annoying.
That's true, but in my case with loan debt, it allowed me to get into the industry much earlier than I could had I saved and paid cash. While those who waited and saved can get away with regional FO pay easier than I ever could, I'll offset it with higher earnings at a younger age. All a balance.It's amazing what you can do by delaying pleasure, paying cash for stuff, and not being a slave to the bank by borrowing.
I'll throw my two cents in here.....many professional careers require a few if even several years of paying dues, not making the money that you will down the road, paying back student loans, heaven forbid-living on a budget, living in a small apartment and knowing how to live within your means and sticking to that, etc. It won't kill you. It didn't kill any of us. We all managed, a lot of us quite well and we weren't scarred for life and didn't really miss out on much. In fact, looking back....some of the best times of my life were when I didn't have so many "things" to cope/deal with, be responsible for, and my life was far less complicated and far more simple. It was exciting, a challenge and I knew I was on my way to somewhere. Meanwhile, I was getting the valuable experiences that I needed, met some incredible mentors and for the most part, enjoyed myself. It was a win win as far as I am concerned.I made the decision not to get into the career because they exploit people like you. The passion is what gets you in, and then they give you the shaft. Go back and look at the math I used. Tell me my numbers are wrong.
I'm telling you that for a lot of people, it doesn't make any sense financially and you pay a hell of a price for your passion.
And when a lot of long term pilots say they would advise their children against getting into the career, that tells me something, too.
"I do not know a single professional airline pilot who wants his or her children to follow in their footsteps." That's not me. That's Chesley Sullenberger. I think he might know what he's talking about.
I will stand by my contention that anyone going into any career needs to take a long hard look at the numbers and see if they can make it work. If you consider that a lecture, oh well.
And it's EXACTLY what the woman who posted here initially needs to hear.
I live in Kailua-Kona. My wife and I bring home 42,000 a year. We have 3 kids and our monthly income is $100 too much to qualify for food stamps. However my kids eat well, our QOL is high, beachs, county pools and libraries are free. We shop carefully, live in a condo near the ocean, take good care of our vehicles and still afford to eat out or go to a movie once a month or so. And I'm starting my PPL next month. Its called budgeting and living within your means.