I know I am only 1 post deep into this blog but I had to move it. I made a typo when I bought the address so the new blog is Money Life Leaders. Please stop by and check it out.
Thanks
Do It Right This Time
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Monday, May 13, 2013
Welcome!
Welcome to Do It Right This Time. I put this blog together to document the path
my family and I are taking to financial independence.
Every year, on my birthday, I look back and try to figure
out what my main accomplishments were. Somehow
my mind has decided that aging one more year is ok as long as I ended the year
better than I started.
For most of my twenties these accomplishments revolved
around physical fitness, saving money, and acquiring more “stuff”. If I ended the year with a lower net worth
than I began I would be ok as long as I had something to show for it. I’m not saying that this was a smart way to
save but I was young and it made sense to me at the time.
The first few years where my net worth became an issue was
2008-2010 and the stock market did not behave the way I wanted. I was still a newbie investor but I had
enough invested for the crash to hurt me.
After that I made the best decision I could think of and I doubled down
and made some risky trades. I figured I
could make huge gains that would not only erase my previous years losses but
also make even more money.
Every trade I made I pictured the best possible scenario and
what things I could buy with the new money.
I would always tell my self that I had done the math and assessed the
downside but I never focused on it as much as the upside. This allowed me to trick myself into thinking
that these trades were good ideas. I
ended up losing my shirt on those moves and decided that I had to stop, especially when I was risking my family’s future.
It took each one of those experiences to bring to where I am
in today. I have realized that there is
no magic formula for saving for retirement.
You can’t bet your future on your ability to pick the next Apple,
Microsoft, or Facebook. You also can't just put money under a mattress
and hope no one finds it. You have to find
a way to make money, spend what you make efficiently, save as much as possible,
and let time and compound interest work in your favor.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
