Sigurthr
0
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2011
- Messages
- 4,364
- Points
- 83
I guess I'm a little out of touch of the small nonprofit organizations since living up here, heh. There's no shelters or food pantries or youth clubcs, etc locally. I volunteer at the tricounty EOC (emergency op center) and at various community events, especially when the Ham clubs are involved. Up here there are no homeless, it's us lower class and lower middle class that could use help.
Well, therein lies the benefit to living out in the middle of no where like I do (20 miles from town). No one comes by, no solicitors, no neighbors, no threat of robbery - hell, most people don't have locks on their homes and don't lock their cars, and most of my family is rich (they live >900mi away), I'm in the "poor" branch. I do understand what you're saying though and it would work that way for most folks, I'm just in a bit more unique situation. I grew up poor in a rich family, didn't qualify for financial aid and family refused to contribute, so I got in to debt to put myself through school to work dead end jobs in a dieing industry. I make <20k/yr. Right now I'm wanting to go back to school for a better trade more than anything else, but still paying off my old loans. If I had stated a mid level lottery winning scenario (in between toys and set for life) I would have included going back to school.
Winning the lottery would solve 99% of all my issues without presenting any real downside other than the initial chance of heart attack (from shock). I don't play only because I can't justify throwing money at an endless pit in the hopes of a pipe dream when saving it would directly benefit me more.
Well, therein lies the benefit to living out in the middle of no where like I do (20 miles from town). No one comes by, no solicitors, no neighbors, no threat of robbery - hell, most people don't have locks on their homes and don't lock their cars, and most of my family is rich (they live >900mi away), I'm in the "poor" branch. I do understand what you're saying though and it would work that way for most folks, I'm just in a bit more unique situation. I grew up poor in a rich family, didn't qualify for financial aid and family refused to contribute, so I got in to debt to put myself through school to work dead end jobs in a dieing industry. I make <20k/yr. Right now I'm wanting to go back to school for a better trade more than anything else, but still paying off my old loans. If I had stated a mid level lottery winning scenario (in between toys and set for life) I would have included going back to school.
Winning the lottery would solve 99% of all my issues without presenting any real downside other than the initial chance of heart attack (from shock). I don't play only because I can't justify throwing money at an endless pit in the hopes of a pipe dream when saving it would directly benefit me more.