on 28-12-2015 12:40 PM
Hi all,
i am trying to work out if I can leave work or not as I cannot manage work and home, and I feel I can no longer cope with both
I own my own house.
Im not trying to be nosey, but what is a rough idea of what would be needed to live on if I live very simply.
i do have kids and other bills but just a rough beginning idea for myself would be good.
any tips ?
thanks
on 29-12-2015 08:59 AM
on 29-12-2015 09:53 AM
geez esayaf. I hope you have a better year coming up, a lot of people are really doing it tough atm, I know
on 29-12-2015 09:57 AM
on 29-12-2015 11:09 AM
Ash, Is there any chance of working part time for a while, and then going back to work full time when things change?
It would be good to have this option..Or depending on the work you do, could some of it be done at home?
I wouldnt take any notice of some of the opinions here..some dont know what they are talking about..guessing and throwing figures round, making assumptions..
on 29-12-2015 08:34 PM
on 29-12-2015 08:55 PM
on 29-12-2015 09:32 PM
Sandy, I wasnt referring to you-Im sorry that you thought that.
I think your advice is sound and sensible...and useful for anyone whos trying to save money..
PS Thanks Stawks
on 29-12-2015 10:20 PM
Wife, myself and two teenage kids live comfortably on around 50k. We have done it tough in the past and lived simply on 20 - 25 k when the kids where younger. ( house was paid off ) This still included basic house and contents and car insurance etc.but buying a set of car tires or paying school fees was a worry. Sometimes we picked up second hand tires, did some of our own mechanical repairs, purchased all furniture and electrical second hand etc. We did all of our own house repairs using second hand materials. Kids wore hand me downs from relatives etc. Other clothes came from discount store sales etc. My own work clothes and boots where thread bare and worn.
The family found plenty of cheap or free ways to have fun. ie. fishing, bike rides, friends over, swimming or canoeing in the farm dam, "bushies" ( bonfires ) with toasted marshmellows, damper and a few illegal fireworks.
There was never any spare money and trying to keep up with regular bills was incredibly stressfull. I havnt got any desire to go back to that lifestyle as the lack of money was a source of constant struggle and worry when unplanned expenses came up.
on 29-12-2015 10:43 PM
A big expense (even when the house is paid off) are sudden home maintenance costs.
From my experience these unexpected disasters come in bunches....I'm still working my way through the most recent list.
on 29-12-2015 11:19 PM
We where " lucky" in that we lived in a small four room, 100 year old timber framed cottage. You could just put in a bit of pipe or replace one rotten bit of timber with a less rotten piece. We purchased it in 1981 for $4000 ( in a remote country town ) and recieved the first home owners grant for $6000 It was priced at land value, minus the demolition costs of the cottage.
I was just a lad, but I pulled it down to a bare frame of three rooms and rebuilt the whole thing myself using parts from another old house I demolished for free. By the time we finished it was a nice little place that we sold ten years later for $75,000 when we traded up to something bigger.