somethingshiny
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2007
- Messages
- 6,746
somethingshiny said:sorry for the threadjack...
Kenny~ What is your avatar? It looks like it could be a different angle and cool lighting for your octavia??
FrekeChild said:Wow. I have to say that that "policy" of yours rubs me the wrong way. I'd rather finance the luxuries and have plenty of money for emergencies and life stuff than financing an emergency. I can live without luxuries, but medical care or something similar? I'll pay for it right away and forgo the luxuries.lelser said:No debt, no mortgage. We spend on rocks (OK, so that's technically for work) and travel. Everything is paid in full each month.
Sometimes I get requests to finance a stone for someone, and my usual response is "if you need to finance it, you shouldn't buy it." It's one thing to carry debt when an emergency strikes - like the furnace or the car dies - but quite another to go into debt for a luxury item.
lelser said:luckynumber said:eh? i thought lisa was saying "dont finance luxuries. carry debt only if you really have to, ie if your savings doesnt cover it, and you REALLY have to go into debt"?
have i got that wrong??
i'd never finance a rock!!
That is exactly what I was saying. If someone takes a loan elsewhere to buy a rock, that's between them and their lender. I just would feel guilty holding that debt since I've seen too many people go sideways buying things they couldn't afford. Banks and CC companies are NOT your friend, and with interested rates at usurious levels it just makes sense to me to save first, buy later.
If I've offended people, I'm sorry.
ksinger said:lelser said:luckynumber said:eh? i thought lisa was saying "dont finance luxuries. carry debt only if you really have to, ie if your savings doesnt cover it, and you REALLY have to go into debt"?
have i got that wrong??
i'd never finance a rock!!
That is exactly what I was saying. If someone takes a loan elsewhere to buy a rock, that's between them and their lender. I just would feel guilty holding that debt since I've seen too many people go sideways buying things they couldn't afford. Banks and CC companies are NOT your friend, and with interested rates at usurious levels it just makes sense to me to save first, buy later.
If I've offended people, I'm sorry.
You certainly didn't offend me. It's your sale to turn away, as you will. It just goes to show how far we've come from the days when more people on both sides of the desk tried to act in what they felt was an ethical way, even when it might not be in their short-term interest. People get offended at the honesty. Well, I NEVER! How DARE you tell me that you think what I'm doing isn't prudent!It's a pity there were virtually no lenders doing that in the run-up to the housing implosion, isn't it? Wonder how different things would be if lenders hadn't been willing to allow low-income people with no means, to take on trainloads of debt.
At the end of the day, debt is debt, be it from a luxury item (a choice) or an emergency (not a choice). Freely chosen debt from luxury purchase has the potential to be very bitter, when the genuine emergency comes along.
miraclesrule said:I would rather pay cash for a piece of crap older car. Who cares? As long as it gets you from point A to point B. I am so worried about the "keeping up with the Kasdashians" mentality. I'm going to end my rant here....because I could go on and on and on and on....
somethingshiny said:tgal~ Your avatar looks so sad...![]()
especially not a home if one can't afford itmiraclesrule said:But the drama and stress associated with the game of credit is so mindboggling and destructive, it scares me. If you don't have the money, you shouldn't buy it. Except for the home and maybe.....maybe..and that is even a stretch for me...a car, then you shouldn't buy it.
why take the trip if you guys have so much debt?lcom said:I do, we did not for a very long time and had nice savings but then DH was laid off for almost a year and that all went and we had a trip to Ireland that I charged and have not paid off, we also have student loans, he has been back at work now for 2 weeksand it is very hard to not go shopping! But I know we have to pay off the credit and get a cushion back, it is nice that all of his paycheck can go towards that since we have gotten used to living a more frugal lifetyle.