AzScorpion
Moderator
- First Name
- Dave
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2019
- Threads
- 335
- Messages
- 26,335
- Reaction score
- 132,692
- Location
- Back Home In AZ!
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Ford Ranger Tremor
- Occupation
- Retired...Full Time Slacker
- Thread starter
- #46
Walter that's a great story and a great addition to this thread!! It's nice to see how everyone took different paths in life and how they came together in the end. You're lucky to have a dad like that he sounds like a very smart man and very handy too. It's nice to be able to get into the family business and help it grow. Also your advise at the end is spot on and seems to be a common thing among most of us here.My path was different.
I am an only child of an only child.
With the example that my Grandmother and Dad provided as a template, I learned to live within my means.
Both of them paved the way for me to live a comfortable life from the day I was born that will see me to the end of life.
Credit is also due to my late wife that had her life taken from her through no fault of her own too early in life.
My Dad owned his business. A local glass company in the town we lived in.
He had worked for two large national companies after being released from the Army Air Corp in 1946.
He wanted to control his path and opened for business May 1st, 1956.
I would go to work on Saturdays and do clean up work around the shop.
Was paid one dollar for around six hours of chores.
From grades 6-12 I went to work after school.
My Dad and I got along very well. Never butted heads.
Collage was not for me as I knew my career path was with my Dad.
Joined the Naval Air Reserve two weeks after graduating HS.
Came back after basic and rate training.
Went to work with my Dad for the next 28 years.
But this is about money. How to get, grow, save and preserve.
In many ways I was lucky.
As an only child of an only child with only my Grandmother and Dad as family, I knew I would inherit in time.
As I mentioned above, my Dad and I got along wonderfully.
I lived at home until age 25.
By that time I had saved enough for a large down payment on my first home.
One of the best investments I ever made. I have never paid rent.
Lived in that home for 25 years. Paid it off early. Then rented it for 2.5 years. Earned $48k in rent. Sold it in one day for seven times what I paid for it.
The money from the sale allowed me to purchase a small vacant lot in town that provided more profit years later.
My Dad sold the building the glass company was operated from in 1996.
He was 75 and had done his time. Someone came along and made him an offer that worked for him.
The business was closed.
This was the third location on the same street. But this one he owned. He bought the land in 1964. Built his own building, two story with underground parking.
It was a steel framed structure. He bought left over steel from the construction of Standford Linear Accelerator project for $600. Built a crane truck to raise the posts and beams. Did the welding for the steel structure himself. Sold what steel he didn't use for $150.
Other than excavating the underground parking earth, erecting one fire wall and installation of the fire sprinkler system, my Dad, one skilled carpenter and two laborers Built a 7,000 square foot building. This building is still standing and in use today.
In 1994 my wife and I were driving on CA hwy 5 heading home on a Sunday.
The radio was tuned to KGO 810. Major bay area station. The program was Money Talk with Bob Brinker.
That opened up the world of financial investing in the market to me.
Bob talked in a manner that was easy to understand.
When we arrived home I signed up to receive his monthly news letter, Bob Brinker's Marketimer.
Bob hasn't been on the radio for about ten years but still publishes his insightful news letter. Still subscribe.
I read the suggested books from Bob's website, www.brinker.com.
This encounter having the radio station tuned in while Bob's program was airing was pure luck.
Now I had a foundation to build upon.
My Grandmother and Dad did not invest in the markets.
They did not have the mindset to show me this form of wealth building.
My Grandmother was a contractor that built homes and sold them.
My Dad ran his business and invested in real estate.
I choose my own investments. At one time I sought help. That didn't work for me.
I would make a suggestion to my broker and they would say "You don't want to invest in that". Only to have that suggestion turn out to be what I should have done.
I do make mistakes at times but I sleep very well knowing that I made the mistake, not someone else.
Save as best you can.
Only speculate with money you can afford to lose.
Have cash available for emergencies. They always come up.
Buy quality items that last.
Enjoy life and those you share it with.
Thank you Dave for starting this thread.
Even though times are so much different now I still think real estate is a great investment and a good way to build wealth. Whether it be adding rental properties to your portfolio or just buying and moving every so many years and taking the profits and reinvesting them into another property.
I never did get into buying individual stocks and was always so busy working I never had time to learn how to. I know a lot of is luck but there's still some skill involved and there's a lot of research that needs to be done. You sound like you have a good knack for it and great advise when you said "never invest what you're not willing to lose".
I've trusted many different financial advisors over the years and have to say except for one I've done well with them. I always try to find someone close who I know is doing well and see what path they took. When I moved here my friend Gary (who retired at 53) were talking one day and I asked him how he did it. He then introduced me to my financial advisor I have now and I set a lot of my investments up mimicking his as it's worked so well for him. It's scary trusting other with your hard earned money but so far so good and everything has performed above my expectations.
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I had 7 guys working 7 days a week and making upper 6 figures but I had a goal. Now him being married with 2 kids you'd think he'd be a little more motivated but he wasn't. He'd rather fish and hunt and make enough money to just get by. That's fine but the snarky remarks I'd get from my sister had me biting my tongue more times than I cared for. She'd always tell the kids "go suck up to your rich uncle" or "we're all not rich like you". You wanna know the funny part, he was a painter too!
He had the same opportunity as I had but lacked the drive.