I think most of us know people who live paycheck to paycheck. I used to be one of them during my student days at A&M and even in the early months of my career. These days, I'm financially very stable, but I remain pretty paranoid about potential financial setbacks. My mindset has always been to sacrifice some good things now for the sake of long-term peace of mind. For example, I would rather skip spending $10k on a trip to Europe and put that money towards any debt I might have. I paid off my house completely so I don't have to worry about that while giving up some percentage interest by investing the money. This approach has allowed me to avoid the stress of living paycheck to paycheck.
I get that there are people who live this way due to circumstances beyond their control like lack of education, health problems, previous debt etc. I'm not talking about those situations. I'm talking about people who make a decent income but still live on the financial edge.
I've always wondered why people in these situations continue to live paycheck to paycheck. Years ago, I had a coworker who was a UX designer. One day, payroll let us know that due to a direct deposit issue, our salary would be delayed until Monday. HR offered to cut checks for anyone who needed it earlier. I didn't mind waiting until Monday, but my coworker rushed to HR to get his check. When I asked him why, he just said tersely, "I need the money." It blew my mind that a delay of a couple of days would cause so much tension. If you can't manage for 48 hours without $2.5k, something's seriously wrong with your financial planning.
Now that I'm older and thinking more about retirement, my paranoia has only grown. I don't want to end up in my 70s living in a rundown apartment with all kinds of chaos around me. I've visited places like that, and it's not pretty. Over the years, I've sacrificed a lot of luxuries and avoided FOMO to pay off my debts and invest in building up enough assets to weather unemployment/bad economy or retire comfortably. It's not easy, but honestly, it's not that hard either. It just takes some discipline and the ability to resist the temptation to chase every shiny object.
What do you guys think? Why do some people choose to live this way even when they don't have to?
I get that there are people who live this way due to circumstances beyond their control like lack of education, health problems, previous debt etc. I'm not talking about those situations. I'm talking about people who make a decent income but still live on the financial edge.
I've always wondered why people in these situations continue to live paycheck to paycheck. Years ago, I had a coworker who was a UX designer. One day, payroll let us know that due to a direct deposit issue, our salary would be delayed until Monday. HR offered to cut checks for anyone who needed it earlier. I didn't mind waiting until Monday, but my coworker rushed to HR to get his check. When I asked him why, he just said tersely, "I need the money." It blew my mind that a delay of a couple of days would cause so much tension. If you can't manage for 48 hours without $2.5k, something's seriously wrong with your financial planning.
Now that I'm older and thinking more about retirement, my paranoia has only grown. I don't want to end up in my 70s living in a rundown apartment with all kinds of chaos around me. I've visited places like that, and it's not pretty. Over the years, I've sacrificed a lot of luxuries and avoided FOMO to pay off my debts and invest in building up enough assets to weather unemployment/bad economy or retire comfortably. It's not easy, but honestly, it's not that hard either. It just takes some discipline and the ability to resist the temptation to chase every shiny object.
What do you guys think? Why do some people choose to live this way even when they don't have to?