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SubscriptionsSites I Read
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| Hey all,
Thanks for funneling your Amazon purchases through my link. I wanted to provide a quick refresher for 2009, and also give you a quick report on 2008. How to use my Amazon link and a) get 4-6% back on your purchase, or b) donate your 4-6% to Kiva loans 1. Go to: http://www.amazon.com?%5Fencoding=UTF8&tag=jkoolaysxanga-20 2. Search for the product, 3. Then buy it. 4. Afterwards, email me with: the item(s), and your paypal email or a mailing address to send a check to if you want your $ back 5. If you don't email me, then I'm just putting all proceeds into Kiva loans. Note: You won't see anything register when you're buying the product, but if you followed the above 3 steps then Amazon will credit 4-6% of the product price (not the total price w/taxes, S&H, etc) to my bank account. 4% for electronics, 6% for everything else (assuming there are 5+ items/month funneling through my link), 10% for Amazon Kindles (I think). This is why even small-ticket items help because you're helping to drive up the # of products, and therefore the kickback rate. Any questions? Email me! The link is posted in my e-mail signature, on gchat, also on my facebook page.
How did 2008 go?
Not bad considering this required no work whatsoever. Collectively... - Y'alls bought 165 items or $8,214.46 through my Amazon link...
- Which generated $436.30 (~6% per purchase) in referral commission (cuz Amazon thinks I referred you to the product you bought)
- As promised,
- I returned $165.39 to buyers (anyone who e-mailed me, otherwise I don't know who bought what), and
- I distributed $270.91 to Kiva loans (http://kiva.org/), and
- I didn't personally benefit from any of your purchases (in fact I bore the risk of paying taxes, if >$600 in revenue)
- Your $270.91 in Kiva loans are specifically helping 10 entrepreneurs:
- Thai Thong, 26 yr old woman in Cambodia, to buy fishing nets
- Lon Channy, 25 yr old woman in Cambodia, to buy piglets
- Mom Chea Group, 16 person village bank in Cambodia, to expand a pig-breeding business
- Vu Nguyen, 42 yr old woman in VietNam, to expand her grocery store
- Agness Bajumau, 42 yr old woman in Tanzania, to expand her softdrinks business
- Rajabmurod Shamsuddinov, man in Tajikistan, to expand his clothing business
- Eva, 37 yr old woman in Peru, to buy wheat, barley, and other grains to start a business
- Ordalina Eva, 46 yr old woman in Peru, to buy sodas and cookies for her business
- Lina Yeun Group, 4 women entrepreneurs in Cambodia, to expand a vegetable business
- Barno Sidikova, a 57 yr old woman in Tajikistan, to buy a dairy cow
Thanks for your support and let me know if you have any other questions. Go Steelers!!!! -Jenny :) | | |
| catie: so how long have you two been married? beata: 2 years loren: forever ken: ha. i like those answers. | | |
| I just finished Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money--That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not! , and the overall concepts/ philosophies really resonated with me. [Not so much the writing -- way too repetitive.] I'm realizing that financial literacy is as important a life-skill to learn as living on your own, finding an apt, getting a job, learning how to cook, learning how to date, etc... but for some reason, it's very low on people's priority lists here in Boston. I understand that life is busy, that there are other "more important" things to think about and work on first. But I also find it a little bit irresponsible to not bother learning something about finances at all. It's like sticking your head in the sand. I'm starting to wonder, if perhaps, in an effort to make it really clear that money isn't one's idol, people give themselves a pass to purposefully not-learn. But I might argue that financial literacy actually enables you to be a better steward of your time, efforts, and finances.
So this book confirmed alot for me in terms of what I've been doing right and what I've been doing wrong. Now before I even started working, I knew 2 things were true of myself: 1) I can't sustain a high-stress work life forever, and 2) I don't like doing things by brute force. (For example, I can either go out and do 10 hrs of volunteer work myself or I can mobilize 10 friends to do 1 hr of volunteering each. I can give money to missionaries myself or I can find a business that regularly buys from Amazon, and funnel their purchases through a referral program that kicks back donations directly to the missionaries. Actually it's not "either/or", it's usually "and", but at least I know things are multiplying beyond my hr-by-hr or dollar-by-dollar efforts.) So when I started working, I made a conscious decision to manage my expenses rigorously. For every 1 month of work, I tried to buy myself 2 months of freedom/ options/ ability to take a paycut, or even not-work. It wasn't painful, I just maintained my previous grad student standard of living. The painful part was enduring the endless heckling from friends and constantly defending myself (e.g. "what the heck are you saving up for? you can't take that to heaven ya know. live a little!"). Ironically, I think everyone expected (and wanted) my expenses to increase except for me. I realize now that there's a big difference between hoarding and being savy. 7 months in, I've bought myself 15 months worth of freedom to not-be-tied-to-a-paycheck. This means I can actually afford to dream, think about what I want to learn from work (versus whether I'll be able to pay my bills), and think about where I'm going in life.
On the other hand though, I realize my mentality is still in the poor dad/ middle-class column (reinforced by a lifetime of messages from parents, education system, society at large, etc). This book has definitely changed my attitude on work and forced me to open up my mind more. I have the fiscal discipline part down, so the next step is to gainfully employ those extra dollars and put them to work. Being young, single, with no kids, and no actual liabilities (no mortgage, no car payments, no credit card debt), I can afford to take on more risk. Anyway, back to the book...
Here are some snippets. I recommend this as a starting point for everybody. It's more about the basic philosophy/approach than about actual strategies. Most of us are in column 1 (including me). It has nothing to do with how much you make. It has everything to do with how you think and what you do with what you make.
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Poor Dad
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Rich Dad
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“I can’t
afford it” --> self limiting, dead-end statement
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“How can
I afford it?” --> open ended, forces-you-to-think question
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“Study
hard so you can find a good company to work for.”
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“Study
hard so you can find a good company to buy.”
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“Play it
safe, don’t take risks.”
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“Learn
how to manage risk.”
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“Entitlement”
mentality: what work/gov owes you
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Total
financial self-reliance: autonomy & competence
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Grievances:
getting what you feel like you deserve/earned, or you’ll quit your job
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“I don’t
work for money, money works for me.”
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If you’re
the type of person who gives up everytime life pushes you around – you'll live it
safe, wait for a big break, die boring and old with lots of friends b/c you
were a nice hard-working guy/girl, but deep down you were terrified of taking
risks. Really wanted to win but the
fear of losing > excitement of winning.
So you didn’t go for it.
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Life
teaches you by pushing you around – each push is saying “Wake up, there’s
something I want you to learn.” Don’t
just get angry and push against your boss, job, low pay, that’s just life
pushing you. “You’d best change your
point of view and stop blaming me, thinking I’m the problem. If you think I’m the problem then you have
to change me. If you realize that you’re
the problem, then you can change yourself, learn something, and grow wiser.”
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Blaming
others gives you limited choices. “If
you don’t pay me more or show me more respect, then I’ll quit.” Most people quit, look for a new job, more
pay, but it doesn’t solve the problem.
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What solves
the problem is using your head. The
poor and middle class work for money, the rich have money work for them.
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Fear
directs most people rather than passion. Fear keeps most people working at a job they
don’t like. There’s fear of paying
bills, fear of being fired, fear of not having enough money, fear of starting
over. You become a slave to money
because of all your fears. Most people
work hard for little money, cling to illusions of job security, vacation, and
a skimpy pension.
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Learn how
money works so you can make it work for you. True learning takes energy, passion, and a
burning desire. Work to learn, don’t
work for money.
Each
human being has a week & needy part of their soul that can be bought. There’s another part that’s strong and
filled with resolve that can never be bought. This part has no price.
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Fear and
desire/greed lead most people to live life chasing after paychecks, pay
raises, and job security, but they don’t know where this is leading them.
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Tell the
truth about how you’re feeling. Then
use your head to think, not just to emotionally react.
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“Stay in
school, get good grades, so you can find a safe, secure job.”
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For many,
school is the end, not the beginning. Schools focus only on teaching people to
work for money, but they don't teach financial literacy.
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Life is a
moment-by-moment struggle:
-Closing
your mind and reacting to situations
-Spend
life living in fear and not exploring dreams
-Work
hard for money thinking money will buy you things that will make you happy
-Living a
life dictated by the size of your paycheck is not really a life
-Job won’t
make you feel secure
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Life is a
moment-by-moment struggle:
-Learning
to open your mind and think about opportunities
-Learning
how to take calculated risks, think outside the box
-Don’t
let money run your life
-The
sooner you forget about needing a paycheck, the easier your adult life will
be
-Most
people don’t see opportunities because they're looking for money and security
-Let go
of the idea of working for money, and instead learn to have money work for
you --> FREEDOM from the Rat Race
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If you read Rich Dad, Poor Dad, let me know what you thought of it.
P.S. I should've clarified that the above chart was just a teaser. Basically a summary of the first chapter or so. He gets more into it with diagrams and whatnot.
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| I had a fantastic August vacationing along the pacific coastlines in California & Hawaii (biking to Sausalito, road tripping, hiking bluffs, exploring tidepools, sitting on beaches, swimming, snorkeling, kayaking, & watching sunset after sunset after sunset). I ate alot of really good food this month and thoroughly enjoyed chillin' with old friends.
I never understood why people liked traveling so much (since it's expensive) but I kinda get it now, it definitely changes your perspective (and it also doesn't have to be expensive). Makes you more chill, more apt to roll with the punches, and more capable of handling whatever circumstance you're in. The very low standard of living we set while camping (not showering vs.
literally being hosed off by carolyn) made me appreciate any version of running water from a spout thereafter. Traveling with friends was also quite eye-opening since everyone's true colors inevitably came out (including my own). I came back with so much more respect for people -- Kenny is meticulous, organized, efficient, & patient; Arny is naturally curious about the world, skilled w/fires & tents, and he's also freaking hilarious; Carolyn is a great navigator & lotsa funnnnn. Our 4-person (2 boys: 2 girls) combo worked well cuz everyone could & did take care of themselves, but also looked out for each other. There was no drama, no neuroticism, no crazyness. My kinda vacation.
Highway 1 Road Trip: Point Reyes, Big Sur, Montana De Oro State Park (6 days/5 nites car camping) highlights: being adventurous & discovering trails, climbing up the side of a cliff, photoshoots, smores, inside jokes lowlights: 10 mile trek to morrow rock & back, sand-logged shoes




Honolulu, Hawaii: Iolani Palace, Oahu Plantation, Swapmeet, snorkeling at Shark's Cove, snorkeling at Hanauma Bay, hiking Diamond Head Crater, kayaking at Kailua Bay, Pali lookout, Waimea Bay, North Shore, Char Hung Sut mah tai su, Waiola's azuki bowl, Leonard's malasadas, Liliha Bakery cocopuffs, korean bbq, haupia, azuki everything, watching tandom surfing & upright paddling competitions (7 days/8 nites)
highlights: ALL OF THE FOOD IN HAWAII (especially desserts), making random hostel friends, snorkeling lowlights: tourists on waikiki, dirtyness of hokondo waikiki beachside hostel
Hawaii's history is super interesting and unlike that of any other state. I'm so glad I got introduced to Hawaii through a local's perspective (thanks LDunn!). I appreciated this even more after I stayed in waikiki for the last 3 days/2 nites on my own, and was put-off by extreme tourism. I loved Hawaii and hope to return again. There's still so much left to eat!
 
 
San Francisco (visiting friends) & Los Angeles (xt's wedding): I spent a significant amount of time meeting up with people for meals/desserts/coffee etc. Here's a video from XT's wedding (although sadly, I am on the wrong side of the dance floor).
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