Well, crap. The party I'm going to today, that I thought started at 5 pm? Starts at 2. I guess I won't be bringing a homemade blueberry pie, after all, since I haven't even gotten it assembled yet.
Woops.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Well, crap. The party I'm going to today, that I thought started at 5 pm? Starts at 2. I guess I won't be bringing a homemade blueberry pie, after all, since I haven't even gotten it assembled yet.
Woops.
oOOOH. I have leftover pie in the fridge downstairs that I was forgetting about. Soon, pie all gone....
Ooo, a million dollars after taxes . . . pay off all debts, buy a house, buy a car, sock a bunch of money into a medical bills fund, then travel. Hubby's been wanting to show me Monterey and Germany, and I want to show him western Pennsylvania.
Thanks! Yep, it's my birthday, the big 3-4.
Just a baby! Happy birthday, Nora. You share a birthday with my little sister.
I just now realized that the reason why I'm feeling grumpy and loserish is probably because I'm getting a cold. Oops.
Yeah, the problem with the million dollars thing is that, after taxes, let's say that you'll have $500,000.
I've decided that even if I won as low as $300K in the lottery (lottery winnings are taxfree in Can.) I would quit my job. Not forever, but the win would let me pay off my mortgage (my only real debt besides a little bit of credit card debt) and live for a couple of years and maybe go back to school or start a little business. Once the mortgage was paid off, I don't need a lot of money to live modestly. It wouldn't give me a life of leisure, but it would get me out of the rat race.
Happy Birthday Nora.
It wouldn't take much money for me to quit my job! Although if it were like $100K, I'd have to get a new one pretty quickly, after paying off debt and etc.
Truly, it is a modest amount of money compared to a million dollar lottery win, but first the severance pay and then the Unemployment benefits extension so that I can go to school fulltime for a year feels like such a tremendous gift, so much so that I don't seem to be able to stop talking about it for long.
Eventually I'll start grumbling about school, I'm sure. Hopefully, the shiny will have worn off before I've driven all my friends away with School Loves Carrots.
Anyway, back to my point: the amount of money is only somewhat correlated to the amount of happiness it buys.
I really think that money just buys options.