RamblingMad
I'm an 80s kid too.
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2019
- Messages
- 8,005
I am reading “The Simple Path to Wealth”by JL Collins and it is so straightforward and easy to understand.
And I have to say, he has reframed how I think about spending. I’ve always been a good saver. But here’s how to think about spending vs investing that might blow your mind:
Let’s say I opt to go to dinner with my husband and spend $100 (post-COVID). If instead I opted to invest that same $100, and allow it to grow for the next 27 years, that same $100 could be worth $1300. Knowing that, would I ask my husband if he wants to go out for a $1300 dinner tonight?????
Maybe $100 is an extreme for dinner for those on this forum, but multiplying any spend by 13 (your multiple will be different) really makes me ask myself if I want it badly enough. Could be $5.
Thinking about the lost opportunity cost through this lens has totally shifted how I think about spending.
But maybe you want to go out for that nice dinner to get away. There is a balancing act here. If you're going to go out for dinner, what do you want to get?
I love to cook, so if I think I can do just as well at home, I'll cook it at home. I never order scallops or crab legs anymore. I can easily cook both just as well at home.
For me the decision is: what can I get at a restaurant that I don't want to cook at home? For example, baking macarons takes a very long time. And I can't make them as good as I can buy them. Almond flour isn't cheap either. So I'll opt to buy them, rather than make them. Recently, I went out for fish and chips. I don't have a fryer at home, and it's not an investment I want to make.
I'm working on making a good bloomer loaf of bread based on Paul Hollywood's book. I haven't quite mastered it yet. I haven't figured out proofing yet. But I find the process enjoyable, and I will figure it out. The cost of bread flour, yeast, salt, oil, and water isn't that expensive to keep learning how to get it right.
So if you're going to spend $100 to go out for dinner, what do you want to get?
The other way to think of this is: what activities make you happy? Then, you can focus your money on those things. For me this is camping and hiking and traveling. My big NP trip for August is going to cost me $450 for lodging, which I'm splitting with other people plus food and gas.