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2013-14 Shelby GT500
Thinking of selling my car
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<blockquote data-quote="nix5o" data-source="post: 13024550" data-attributes="member: 30712"><p>I see where your coming from, I've been in your position where, you want to walk out on the b.s. at work and you can't cause of your monthly payments. </p><p></p><p>My big eff this moment came after my race car was stolen. I had just lost everything I'd spent the last 6 years busting my ass for and the shit was getting deep at work. I didn't have much left after I paid off the credit cards and the other debt associated with the race car. So I decided that never again would I be stuck. I made a plan on what I was going to do different. You need to make you a plan of what you want now, and what you want in the future. I'm sure the plan will evolve as you get older and things change. </p><p></p><p>A year and a half after I said I would never be stuck, I was able to switch careers. It didn't work out how I would have liked, but I wasn't stuck because I put myself in that position not to be, and I went back to avation. Because I had set myself up nicely the transition wasn't painful, got me another job spinning wrenches and had a new outlook on avation. </p><p></p><p>I'm now working the best avation job I've ever had, good pay, benifits and schedule (28/28). My plan has evolved since I first started this mission. I've got a couple of business ventures that I'm able to comfortably invest in and not touch my nest egg, I have a new shelby, and a few other toys and I still get to go racing this time I'm driving for someone else. </p><p></p><p>My advice would be have enough cash to cover you for 6 months in the bank if you want the kind of f.u. freedom at a job.</p><p></p><p>Then I would consult a financial expert and weigh the benifits of financing your shelby (for example) vs paying it off or selling it in the grand scheme of your building wealth goals.</p><p></p><p>You definately need to balance having fun with your hard earned cash with putting it in the bank. just imo</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nix5o, post: 13024550, member: 30712"] I see where your coming from, I've been in your position where, you want to walk out on the b.s. at work and you can't cause of your monthly payments. My big eff this moment came after my race car was stolen. I had just lost everything I'd spent the last 6 years busting my ass for and the shit was getting deep at work. I didn't have much left after I paid off the credit cards and the other debt associated with the race car. So I decided that never again would I be stuck. I made a plan on what I was going to do different. You need to make you a plan of what you want now, and what you want in the future. I'm sure the plan will evolve as you get older and things change. A year and a half after I said I would never be stuck, I was able to switch careers. It didn't work out how I would have liked, but I wasn't stuck because I put myself in that position not to be, and I went back to avation. Because I had set myself up nicely the transition wasn't painful, got me another job spinning wrenches and had a new outlook on avation. I'm now working the best avation job I've ever had, good pay, benifits and schedule (28/28). My plan has evolved since I first started this mission. I've got a couple of business ventures that I'm able to comfortably invest in and not touch my nest egg, I have a new shelby, and a few other toys and I still get to go racing this time I'm driving for someone else. My advice would be have enough cash to cover you for 6 months in the bank if you want the kind of f.u. freedom at a job. Then I would consult a financial expert and weigh the benifits of financing your shelby (for example) vs paying it off or selling it in the grand scheme of your building wealth goals. You definately need to balance having fun with your hard earned cash with putting it in the bank. just imo [/QUOTE]
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2013-14 Shelby GT500
Thinking of selling my car
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