I get my first paycheck next week and I'm going to sit down and I'm going to start making donations. I wish I could donate all at once and keep recurring donations but it's not practical.
So I'm going to make a list (maybe a tracker in the bullet journal, I'm trying to keep) and start donating to a different organization each month. It may only be $10 but it's something.
I have mostly organized my CDs, classical and opera and everything else. Maria Callas is now filling my apartment. Ah, La Davina.
I'm tempted to switch my 401k over from mutual funds to a cash account to avoid having it wiped out again by falling stock prices, but then again I'm not at all confident of the continued value of the dollar either...
I had been planning to increase my contribution to my 401k, but now I'm considering reducing it.
Disadvantage to falling stock prices is your 401k looks smaller. It is a deeply uncomfortable feeling. The advantage to falling stock prices is that your monthly contributions buy more shares so that when prices go back up, your funds increase all the more. Depending on how close to retiring a person is, there are differing strategies for dealing. I'm at least twenty years out, so I'm hanging on to the hope that the market doesn't tank so badly that it utterly ceases to exist, and that when it is time for me to retire I will be able to time my cash-out on an upswing. More strategy than that, I do not have.
Emergency question: I want to make raisin bread. The dough is currently rising, but I forgot to put the raisins in! Should I shove them in now, in the middle of the rise, or just do it after?
OK, I kind of split the difference and shoved them in a little without deflating the whole thing.
i'm making an apple pie. Mostly because my daughter wanted to make a pie and we had a LOT of apples, but now I feel kind of like this.
Shrift, I would be interested in fannish organizing, if there's a list or something that you could point me towards, please.
I will send you an invite.