The short answer to that is 'NO'!
Lee and Doug live in Johannesburg. A Zimbabwean works for them as caretaker on their large property combining business premises and a sprawling family home.
He went to home to Zimbabwe recently for his month's annual leave.
He came back a sad man. Cheerful in seeing his family but disgusted by the loss of good schooling, decent government and shocking business practices. There simply are no jobs and the farms which were amongst the richest in the world, lie barren, full of weeds.
He told me that his family survives on the barter system.
They grow vegetables, especially maize, and he trades them for meat and bricks or fabric to make homemade garments.
He laughed when I mentioned actual money. 'The Zim dollar is worthless so nowadays they operate with the American dollar of which we see very few.'
Pixabay.
The idea of him being able to save money is laughable.
Stories about THE BIGGEST MONEY MISTAKE I EVER MADE were highlighted by Charis Torrance in a SA Fairlady magazine article last July.
She highlights the following:
Kristia van Heerden in her early days before she became well known as the host of THE FAT WALLET SHOW, abused her credit card and store cards until by the time she was 25 she owed over R100,000. Earning only R5000 per month, it was a substantial amount. She took good advice and paid back every cent. She was forced to educate herself in money matters.
Maya fisher-French and her husband moved from an affordable house to live in an upmarket area in a bigger better (or so they thought) home. It had to be repaired extensively and expensively until they had to try to sell their large house which had become a nightmare. In a deflated market they couldn't recoup the money they had carelessly spent.
They were in serious financial trouble which took them years to escape from.
Samke Mhlongo was fortunate as a young woman to find a job that paid her exceedingly well. She lived the 'good life' with a luxurious car and apartment and dozens of Spa treatments.
The firm for whom she worked had to suddenly downsize and she was left jobless with huge debts to pay off.
She learned to live within her means and studied for a degree over the next few years. Today she is the CEO in a company she founded herself, The Next Chapter Wealth Partners.
Personally I grew up in a home where money was wisely and carefully used.
Holidays were in our comfortable caravan while friends went to expensive hotels for weeks at a time. My father had his own engineering business and we lived comfortably but not lavishly like many we knew. i was encouraged to sew my own clothes from the age of 14. It is still a hobby of mine.
My parents advised and helped me get a degree.
I must have absorbed my inclination to save a little every month and how to manage a small inheritance I received when I was 33 years old.
It was not a huge amount of money but I invested it carefully.
PIxabay
When I needed a new car, I borrowed the money from my own investment and PAID IT BACK until it was earning interest once again. I also chose a car that I could afford.
I bought things I really needed and paid for an overseas holiday from that fund. Each time I PAID THE MONEY BACK.
When I could, I invested that money in the house my husband and I owned and was able to reduce the sum we owed the bank, considerably.
It was a huge saving.
Spending money wisely on things we could afford has made our lives in our retirement a pleasure.
We live in a home we love in a dream come true situation, near the sea. We still consider each expense carefully and do not squander money unnecessarily. We pack up and travel in our caravan, with friends who also love that lifestyle. We had 3 months on the road visiting stimulating places this year.
Pixabay
Round a campfire closer to home we have planned our next 3 months away visiting the scores of excellent South African game reserves, of which Kruger Park is only one, from May to July in 2020.
My heart bleeds for those foolish enough to have maxed out credit cards and who are caught in a spiral of simply being able to pay the interest off their debt.
Do not despair. Discipline yourself and gradually extricate yourself out of debt. It might take you years but you will hav learned a valuable lesson in the meantime.
MY ADVICE
As a young person learn as much as you can about money and the management thereof.
Ask everybody and anybody what their experience of money is. Listen to the negative stories of which there are millions and the relatively few positive experiences. Read read and do more reading, do not invest in pyramid schemes. There is NO QUICK WAY TO GET MONEY.
Save for that dream holiday, paying it off for years after it is long gone is simply NOT WORTH IT
There are many places and activities that you can take part in that are absolutely free. Use the internet and find out!
Above all .......
LIVE within your means.
Only then will you learn the true meaning of happiness and freedom.
Practice makes perfect.....and good luck one and all.
really great post, and I totally agree with learning how to use money wisely. It is quite challenging! Have an upvote :)
@tipu curate
Upvoted 👌
Even Solomon in ALL his wisdom messed up in the end.......so is there much hope for us ordinary people?
Absolutely avoid debt like the plague unless you're perfectly sure of your financial stability.
Thank you for your comment.
Money, money, money... Money is the most successful fiction ever created.
When Marco Polo came back from China, he brought with him paper money used in China already for a thousand years or so to the moment of his arrival there in the 1270s. But in Venice at that time people didn't use paper money. I don't think they even know about paper back then. So he was laughed at and burn his paper money, worth thousands in China. They didn't believe in the
When recently ISIS fighters blew up the bank in IRAQ, they tore and burn the American flag as they hate America's guts. However, they didn't burn American dollars. They trusted that fiction. LOL
People's life is not about money. It's about how they coped with the most important things like love, friendship, interesting profession, respect of their peers, comfortable living accommodation, children and it is about deeply rooted in subconscious mind frustration of not attaining those important goals.
However, if we look at people statistically and need to evaluate their worth, then there is no other better relative measure than money. Let us be clear - they don't measure a person's worth. A financially poor person can be of great heart, kindness or spiritual richness and magnitude. Take Vincent Van Gough for instance. But I think there was no fiction (people didn't come up with one) that had some kind of a common base to all the people in the world.
Thus money is that common base, a common fictional story that people trust to make their communication possible over vast territories and multiple languages. I would call money is the projection of human life onto the financial plane. LOL
Money as fiction - there's a deep thought.
On top of all that you've said there's the fiction that 'old money' is more worthwhile than 'new money'!
Old money according to many meant the people were decent, well mannered and had high morals.
NOT SO! I think those people just knew how to hide their base activities and nature, better AND they'd had much more practice.
Often people who had worked hard to make their own money were thought to be brash, outspoken and didn't care what others thought.
And so the fiction goes on.................
Thanks for visiting and your thoughts mgaft1.
Yeh, Bernard Shaw has a good play about it. )))
'The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain,,,,,,,,,,,,'
My mother was an elocution teacher. I learned at a young age to round my vowels and project my voice!
We had fun producing plays.
You were lucky in that sense. For one thing, it's always lucky for a child to have two loving parents. But especially in the sense that your dad encouraged you to learn new words and your mom taught you to round your vowels ( the skill I am not even aware existed) from an early age. 👌
Hey @justjoy, so agree with the wisdom of living within your financial means. So many stories still crop up about over extending of people borrowing too much only to become unstuck. Happiness is not based on money!
One of my favourite childhood memories was going on a moonlight picnic with my parents.
We drove to the top of a hill facing a wide horizon. With crickets cricking we set out the picnic blankets, old ones from our beds, and when the sandwiches were finished we had cups of tea from the thermos and watched the golden orb of the moon pop the horizon and float into a clear sky like a magical balloon.
I remember all the details and especially the security of our parents' love as we drove home appearing to 'race the moon'. Priceless.
Thank you for your wise comment.