This could very easily tie in with Lupo's "Excuses, Excuses, Excuses!" thread, except it's not about weight loss. It's about people who make no effort whatsoever to manage their money, and then bitch about how poor they are.
I have a friend who still lives at home. She's gone to university once, dropped out, decided to go to a technical college here, dropped out from that, and is once again enrolled at the university. Her student loans alone are easily over $6000 and she is once more in her first year, because of dropping out and re-enrolling. Her parents initially covered the cost of tuition and books, on the condition that she pay them installments every two weeks. To cover these costs, she works for a local community organization, helping out at schools and such. She's not taking full-time classes (I do believe it's three classes a week versus five, which is what is considered full-time around here), nor is she working full-time. Her loan repayment efforts started out well, but she very quickly realized that she now had money at her disposal, and could spend it however she liked! Pretty soon she had a credit card and was going to EB Games every week, easily dropping $70 every visit, plus buying movies and paying for random things she participated in online. She also has a massive Coke habit to feed, often buying a twelve-pack every two days, sometimes more often. Things very quickly got out of hand, and she could no longer meet her parents' requisite loan payments, never mind keep up with her near-maxed out credit card. What was the obvious answer to this? Buy a custom-made gaming rig, of course! Why, a computer of over $2500 would definitely fix everything!
This happened over the course of about six months, and every day I would get texts from her while she was in class, most of them to the tune of "omg i am SO BROKE! wtf am i gunna doooooo?!", which I took to ignoring. She begged me to go and hang out with her, because she was depressed, so I would suggest going to the $2 matinee at the local cheap theatre, or maybe just out for a cup of coffee at a nearby Tim Horton's, and she would whine, "But I'm broooooke! I can't afford to go out!" and so I would ask her what she wanted to do instead, and she would just start another bitch-fest. I've only actually seen her a few times in the past three months because of this behavior. The last time we were together, I got so fed up with it that I sat her down and helped plan out a budget that she could easily stick to. She was very happy for my help and went on and on about how this was going to fix everything!
Well, I just got a text message from her. "Guess what I bought today? A netbook! It was only $450, and I need a laptop for class, so I just had to have it!" I haven't brought myself to answer it yet, because I can't think of anything to say that isn't cussing her out.
I have never understood how people could live so beyond their means and remain so oblivious to the consequences. And then, when they start in on complaining about how hard their lives are, it takes everything I have not to smack them in the face. Yeah, I worry about money too. Everyone does. But I at least try to change my situations with budgets, cheaper alternatives and doing without things I don't need!
I have a friend who still lives at home. She's gone to university once, dropped out, decided to go to a technical college here, dropped out from that, and is once again enrolled at the university. Her student loans alone are easily over $6000 and she is once more in her first year, because of dropping out and re-enrolling. Her parents initially covered the cost of tuition and books, on the condition that she pay them installments every two weeks. To cover these costs, she works for a local community organization, helping out at schools and such. She's not taking full-time classes (I do believe it's three classes a week versus five, which is what is considered full-time around here), nor is she working full-time. Her loan repayment efforts started out well, but she very quickly realized that she now had money at her disposal, and could spend it however she liked! Pretty soon she had a credit card and was going to EB Games every week, easily dropping $70 every visit, plus buying movies and paying for random things she participated in online. She also has a massive Coke habit to feed, often buying a twelve-pack every two days, sometimes more often. Things very quickly got out of hand, and she could no longer meet her parents' requisite loan payments, never mind keep up with her near-maxed out credit card. What was the obvious answer to this? Buy a custom-made gaming rig, of course! Why, a computer of over $2500 would definitely fix everything!
This happened over the course of about six months, and every day I would get texts from her while she was in class, most of them to the tune of "omg i am SO BROKE! wtf am i gunna doooooo?!", which I took to ignoring. She begged me to go and hang out with her, because she was depressed, so I would suggest going to the $2 matinee at the local cheap theatre, or maybe just out for a cup of coffee at a nearby Tim Horton's, and she would whine, "But I'm broooooke! I can't afford to go out!" and so I would ask her what she wanted to do instead, and she would just start another bitch-fest. I've only actually seen her a few times in the past three months because of this behavior. The last time we were together, I got so fed up with it that I sat her down and helped plan out a budget that she could easily stick to. She was very happy for my help and went on and on about how this was going to fix everything!
Well, I just got a text message from her. "Guess what I bought today? A netbook! It was only $450, and I need a laptop for class, so I just had to have it!" I haven't brought myself to answer it yet, because I can't think of anything to say that isn't cussing her out.
I have never understood how people could live so beyond their means and remain so oblivious to the consequences. And then, when they start in on complaining about how hard their lives are, it takes everything I have not to smack them in the face. Yeah, I worry about money too. Everyone does. But I at least try to change my situations with budgets, cheaper alternatives and doing without things I don't need!
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