What is the single best thing you did to get where you are today?

kimber6

Dryer sheet wannabe
Joined
Apr 26, 2010
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What is the best thing you ever did (or best habit you developed) that contributed the most to your financial success and financial independence? I am a young guy and I love to hear the background info to the success stories!
 
The biggest thing I did was to decide when I was 20 years old that I never wanted to have children. I did not know it at the time, but it was huge in enabling me to retire in 2008 at the age of 45 and greatly improve my everyday life.
 
Best habit developed: Automatic payroll deduction for retirement savings. We never saw the money, never missed it, and didn't fuss very much with the investments (once per year tweaking). We increased the payroll deduction every time our pay went up (approx 1/2 of the increase went to the retirement savings).
 
LBYM, followed by not having children (or at least waiting).
 
I picked the right spouse! Someone that shares my beliefs in living LBYM's and also was a hard worker.
 
Don't increase your spending as your salary increases! You can put the excess aside for the future, and meanwhile you will get used to living on very little.
 
Written budget and use cash for purchases when the money is gone you're done spending.
 
Don't increase your spending as your salary increases! You can put the excess aside for the future, and meanwhile you will get used to living on very little.

+1. Also I started reading and learning about finances and investing. I discovered it wasn't that complicated. Hard, but not complicated.
 
Made the decision very early to set goals and work very hard to achieve them. And it IS a decision one makes as nobody just falls into that work style.
 
I'll give three:

1. Live below my means -- don't buy stuff I can't afford

2. Pay myself first - that is, treat savings and investing like a bill that needs to get paid through my checkbook

3. Followed the rule to not invest in anything that I don't understand.
 
Hard to find the single best one...

Marry well, LBYM, pay yourself first, avoid lifestyle creep, keep investment costs low, know your spending, keep your eyes on the ball.
 
Study hard in High School to get in one of the best university since it matters most in country of my birth, life is mostly on autopilot since then. I guess LBYM is true for most since even if you make a million a day, you can always spend that.
 
I picked the right spouse! Someone that shares my beliefs in living LBYM's and also was a hard worker.

Same here - my wife's financial value system closely aligns with mine (LBYM, saver). This means we can reinforce positive behavior rather than battle or sabotage each other. Of course, sometimes that means we can end up going a little extreme LBYM, but we tend to self-correct pretty quickly. I know a few guys that are very LBYM, but seem to have a tough time saving for retirement - mostly because their spouses refuse to shut down the spending. Poor saps...
 
The biggest thing I did was to decide when I was 20 years old that I never wanted to have children. I did not know it at the time, but it was huge in enabling me to retire in 2008 at the age of 45 and greatly improve my everyday life.
I didn't know not having children at the time would enable me to retire early either.

But I have to agree not having children made a big difference (at least in my life) as I as able to move to different locations for better paying jobs. I didn't have to worry about taking my children out of school, away from relatives and friends..etc.
 
Tough to choose between these three -

1) Dogs instead of kids

2) Selection of a career (programming) that was easy, low stress, well paid, easy to get a new job if necessary (at least from 1979-2006)

3) Always saved, learned how to invest it
 
I started a monthly "net worth" spreadsheet with estimates of how much it needed to increase by on a monthly basis and projections of where I should be in future years based on those monthly increases.

If I found i was not meeting those monthly estimates, I would try to earn/save more to get back on track.

At some point I found that my investments took a life of their own. The momentum swings in the market where beyond my ability to make up major downturns. Conversely, on major upturns I would ask myself how many month/years of work it would have taken to generate even one of those daily upswings.
 
Started maxing out 401k in 1986.
Built house 1 in 1984, took $100k profit from it to build house 2 in 1994, paid it off by 2000.
Worked 50 - 60 hours per week from 1975 to around 2005
Took my company profit disbursements and invested amount exceeding tax liability
Didn't have kids
Do all home maintenance/ landscaping
LBYM
 
pay off your house as fast as you can... take on ZERO credit card debt... these two will free up mucho dollars to sack away for you future
 
Easy, married the right woman.

+1

Also, took up offer from megacorp to move to Japan to build a business. It has been wildly successful, leading to further opportunities in Asia, and the accompanying rewards. I've worked hard for what I have, and have accomplished a lot, but I have to admit to a bit of luck as well, being in the right place at the right time.

R
 
I'd say the one best thing I did was to decide in my early 30's that I wanted to retire (or at least semi-retire) as early as possible. That shaped almost all future financial decisions and put me in a position to leave megacorp at 47. Things like paying off my mortgage early, LBYM, etc., all flowed from that decision.
 
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