I recently read an article over on Monevator’s blog where he suggested that in order to remain motivated to achieving your financial freedom you need to know what your saving for. While I agree on one level with this he suddenly proclaimed that ‘only misers love money for its own sake’. That’s when it hit me. Maybe I’m the miser he’s talking about.
All this financial planning, prudent investing and passive income generation is being done for a reason. I always presumed it was so I could own a nice house somewhere nice and reach the point where the family has a nice comfortable life and I no longer need to work the 9-5pm (sorry that should read 8-6pm with 1.5 hour commute each way). This aim sounds ideal and when you start planning for it, you realise it is achievable.
However, I have a nagging doubt that I’ll never have enough. I mean how much income do I need to live comfortably? Maybe I could move to deepest Asia and get by happily on $1,000 a month. If i’m staying in South East England could I get by on £30k a year? How about £50k? £100k would be nice! When is enough enough?
Once you start investing and see the wonders of compound interest at work it’s hard to see how you’ll ever be able to put a stop to it. Investing for your future is kind of like walking up a see saw, you struggle up hill in the hope that one day you’ll cross the middle pivot and you can enjoy the ride down the other side. Where is the middle pivot?
I was recently talking to my father about our respective ISA portfolios. I nearly fell of my seat when he let slip that he spends ‘that nice dividend cheque’ that comes through the post every couple of months. It got me thinking…when will the day come when the portfolio stops growing and I start spending it?
In some respects the buzz I get out of investing is not the bottom line or the net worth figure i religiously calculate every month end but the joy of watching the portfolio grow in size. If i got my kicks from the profit then maybe i’d be more like the old man and be spending all that lovely dividend or interest income?
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