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DH has new position, threat of moving ebbs away

September 15th, 2014 at 10:38 pm

Unless it's the threat of moving 15-25 miles away, as that is where the desk job will be. So much for years of a working office, and boasting $50/month car fuel. The threat of moving 1300 miles east, should he stay in his current position, did begloom my outlook. His last day with his current group is Friday. We know not what his new salary will be. I really hope it'll be a thousand dollars more per annum at least, to cope with the extra fuel and transportation costs. (Should I look into car-sharing?)

And my appeal to move my child to a course level where he will not be repeating 90% of last year's material was successful. I'll be buying him some workbooks so he can simultaneously review and catch-up for his new course level, the one last year's teacher said he was ready for.

I'm going to try for three wins a day.

What I Hope to Learn Here

August 27th, 2014 at 04:40 pm

Thank you for your sweet welcome. I look forward to gleaning and sharing with you!

I'm here at Saving Advice because most of my savings, investment, and debt repayment strategies and practices are moribund, weak, tepid and minimal. I'm not in a position where I can ply extreme strategies (live in the woods! trap your food! bicycle everywhere in a flat landscape! turn the heat off in January!). It's hard for me to pay attention to so many accounts. I don't always save more than I spend every month.
These are my challenges.

I would like to accelerate my debt pay-off and increase my taxable stock account balances, but right now it seems to me I can do one but not both.

My mortgage and car loans are both accelerated; that is, they will be paid off before the original amortization term. My home equity line of credit will be paid off after the first mortgage if I don't accelerate it. I'd like to pay the HELOC off before the first mortgage is finished, otherwise I'll have such an anticlimax. Not so much a mortgage-burning happy dance, but a shoegaze shuffle to Slint or Stars of the Lid.

Right now, I keep about twelve mortgage payments' worth of cash. This cache covers my car insurance, license tabs, utility bills, living expenses and debt payments. I have a spreadsheet for tracking the balances for these categories. When my cash exceeds 12 mortgage payments, I divide the difference into investment cash and debt repayment. The problem is the difference is usually less than $20, so the investment cash doesn't go far. The instant gratification goes to seeing some 3% or 2.79% loan decrease.

On payday $910 goes into the checking account, the rest into the money market account. Any cash left over from the last spending period goes to the credit card, which usually has a balance under $300, but is paid in full habitually.

There'll come a day when the sum balance of my home equity line of credit and my car loan will be less than my cash-on-hand: will it be worth it to pay off one loan, even if it means not having twelve months' mortgage available? Should that loan to pay off be the one that's a depreciating asset, or the one with the highest interest rate? The loan with the highest monthly payment, or the loan with the most cumulative interest?

I keep thinking there's a black belt or red belt way of making the most of a slender surplus. That's why I joined the Saving Advice community: to see how people with slender surpluses manage their amounts. I am doing things right, but not wonderfully.

Well Hully Gee!

August 26th, 2014 at 12:34 am

Hello! Hajimemashita! Douzo yoroshiku!

I was going to sell some Gilead Sciencs (NASD: GILD) earlier this week, get some Market Vectors Biotech, and the furshlugginer stock spikes: apparently the FDA granted the company's Hepatitis C pharmaceutical treatment "priority consideration." I've owned it for two years. I've got to review my holdings: I don't do it because I'm a timid, myopic kitten. Even though I drink sensibly!

Anywhoo! I have more to share, after I drink sensibly.

Stuff you'd never think to ask:
I like WFMU radio station.
I pile books on top of my bed at night, then as I drowse I push them off so they thud onto the floor.
I can frighten people without raising my voice.
I don't get along with angry, bitter alcoholics.
I like to make homemade fizzy lifting drinks: vanilla cream, strawberry shrub, golden cola, Pittsburgh fizzes. Moxie is not always available to me.
I have more consumer debt than taxable liquid assets.
I geek out about numbers. When a six-digit debt drops to a five-digit debt, or a five-digit debt drops to a four-digit one, that's numberwang.
My mortgage dropped from six digits to the left of the decimal, to five digits left of the decimal.
In one week my car loan will drop from five digits to four digits.

If the past 114 years were bus stops, I'd ask the Toonerville Trolley to let me out at 1924. I might not reboard the trolley.
I have cheap thrills and like to write about them.
Writing is cheap therapy for me, and a source of amusement.
My ring fingers are longer than my index fingers.
You wouldn't want to be riding inside my brain at night, not without a windshield.
I read a lot. I'm trying to read compulsively so I can stay off the net.
I am learning Linux. So much of it is DIY.
Lemon drinks, the Kinks, sable minks, and vivid pinks -- these are a few of my favourite things.

Drink sensibly, to toast the good times when we have them.

This child is not drinking sensibly. This is why his hair left him and his eyebrows are trying to do likewise. Yet I join him in pitching the "Here's To You" toast.