Thursday, May 08, 2008
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Richer than you think? Who'd a thunk?
Metoo wrote a post titled "You're NOT richer than you think!":
Rant time!
And if anyone would like to point out a different view with this type of ad, I'm all ears. So.
O.k. after the millionth time of seeing these stupid ScotiaBank commercials during hockey games, I've blown the gasket. And I can't believe institutions at the level of a national bank can get away with prattling this crap.
They are helping you find ways to stay in debt people!! The "richer than you think" means that they will help you restructure your loans so that you can buy more crap and spend more money. Then you can stay in deeper debt, for a longer time, all with one LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT! That's called wage slavery folks, you gotta keep suckin it up to the man, so that you can pay your dues.
This behaviour by ScotiaBank (and all of them of course, but here it's just egregiously advertised) is no better than those "Credit Card checks" you get in the mail. You know, the ones with the text that says, "Now you have the cash to buy: that surprise vacation, or new widescreen TV, or get that dream boat you've wanted".
It's NOT cash! This is simply the 'high end' of Payday loans. And I find it reprehensible, just different shades of loan sharking.
If you're not rich, then your not rich. Think about it!
---
In a follow-up comment, Metoo wrote:
... isn't it the worst kind of bamboozling? I mean, this sort of thing borders on confidence scams, and I fear that younger generations who will never have known a cash economy will get suckered without mercy. Sub-prime meltdown anyone?
I replied:
I've come to understand that most people really *are* richer than they think.
What gets you rich isn't the money you make ... it's the money you save.
If you can restructure your payments and cut your costs, and most of all, find ways to act your wage and spend less than you make, then save and invest the difference ... well, you can be a lot richer than you probably imagine.
Sure, a bank is going to try to sell you its products to get you there ... Scotiabank mutual funds, Scotiabank consolidation loans, Scotiabank low-interest credit cards or credit lines instead of the cards you may have with other banks ... what else are you going to do? Stuff your cash under a mattress and try to get rich that way? Odds are, you're going to deal with a financial institution at some point if you're serious about laying out your money in any productive way beyond money-in/bills-out.
Scotiabank wants to be the bank to open your eyes to those possibilities, then sell you the investment vehicles. I don't fault them for that.
Metoo:I couldn't agree more. If one restructures debt to allow for quick paying of 'bad debt' (Credit cards, car loans), and manages 'good debt' (mortgage, and appreciating assets). Then yes, you *could* be richer than you think if you invest the difference.Sadly, I don't think people are as smart as you to proceed this way.
Me:
Well, hearing people complain loudly that they'd get themselves out of debt if only they could learn how to spend less than they make and take care of personal business is about as easy to tolerate as people complaining loudly that they wish they could learn how to spell Connecticut. Bottom line -- if you want to learn how to do it, learn how to do it, then do it ... the resources are right there.
If you're complaining that Scotiabank is playing on stupid people, go right ahead. You'll never go broke underestimating the intelligence of the average person.
If people aren't "as smart" as me to proceed in a way that gets their debt paid off so they can put more of their income -- their 'riches' -- into things that matter and/or work for them ... well, I can't blame the bank for that. The bank is there as a tool.
If people get suckered into buying houses they absolutely cannot afford by banks that use predatory lending practices and exotic financial products that are beyond the comprehension of even an educated buyer -- that's bad. I don't like that.
But if people willingly spend themselves into a big hole by devouring all the credit they can get, then cry foul because they were *given* the credit -- I don't rail at the bank. It's not the bank's job to protect you at every turn from outspending your earning capacity.
Metoo:... on the topic of 'predatory' banks, suckers, and digging debt holes. I can't disagree with anything you say. "Victimhood" of borrowers is not what I implied by railing against ridiculously transparent bank ads. And I might add that the "richer than you think" ads are not selling your notion of consolidating debt, living within your means, and investing the difference. Watch them. They are flogging granite counter tops and breakfast nooks, a literal quote. (not sure if you get the same ad cycle on CBC during hockey games in NS).
By being "smart" I stand by the fact that indeed, generally people aren't as studied on the topic of finance as you are. In fact, vast swaths of the population are desperately innumerate (which is worse than the literacy problems we see from time to time, but that's another debate). People just don't get numbers. They avoid the math, and are happily sucked dry by organizations that know how to benefit from the math, and legal wording on contracts as well.
Ask 100 people to explain concepts of finance like amortization, compounding, loan payment calculations, leasing calculations, inflation, real rates of return, present values, etc. I bet very few will be versed to any depth sufficient to analyze their own finances competently.
Banks love this of course, so do other businesses (car dealers?!). Combine with relentless mind bending marketing... and wa-la, "you're richer than you think".
Me:
Ah, that's what I get for not watching commercials. Thanks to the home-brew PVR, the only commercials I see are during the 11-midnight news hour. (Or as we call it, the Lloyd Robertson Rehearsal Show.)
It sounds like you'd get a good "rah-rah!" kick out of a movie I saw on the weekend: In Debt We Trust. I wrote about it over at the bas-dot-com.
Granted, a lot of people can't do the fancy math or comprehend annuities and amortization and all that. Hell, I can't even do a convincing job of explaining short-selling to my coworkers.
But if you can't lay out a simple household budget that doesn't put you deeper in the hole each month -- seriously, don't blame the bank. The basic concepts of *spend less than you make* and *save for a rainy day* don't require a special calculator. If the numbers don't add up in your favour, you have two basic choices: spend less or make more. Adjust your lifestyle by sorting out wants from needs (you *need* a place to live, you *want* it to be a nice house) and adjust as necessary.
I can't blame the banks for making people poor any more than I can blame McDonald's for making people fat or "the media" for making people anorexic.
Advertising can be persuasive. Home improvement shows can skew your expectations. Keeping up with the Joneses is also persuasive. Carrying bad habits from your family of origin can lead you astray. Pride can jam up your urge to reach for help. Fear of math can tempt you to ignore reality.
But to flail your arms at the end of the month when you're in overdraft and facing maxed out credit cards and scream "I can't help it! The banks made me do it!" is a lie, an excuse, and a cop-out.
Wow, that's harsh.
Metoo:Harsh? Truer words were ne'er spoken. And i'm not blaming anybody for making money from the uneducated. It's all within the law of course. But people CAN avoid being suckered.
---
Now, I'm no rich genius. And I may be talking out of my Big Ass with all of this, 'cuz in a few years, homeowners' debt and other life developments may have me screaming for financial mercy. Anything for any readers to add to this, or are we assaulting an expired equine?
Gas prices are up. Suck it up or whine?
Gas prices are up. Gas prices here in Nova Scotia are among the highest in the country. The (regulated) price at the corner is $1.321 per litre. People are freaking out. One by one, freaking out. But how much can you freak out, and for how long?
Antishay writes about the whining on her blog:
I had a conversation the other day that went something like this:Friend: OH MY GOD Gas is now $3.71 a gallon!
Me: Oh?
Friend: THAT'S JUST INSANE. I can't afford that.
Me: I don't really look at gas prices.
Friend: I always go to Arco, they're usually $0.05 less.
Me: I don't know... five cents doesn't really add up. My tank holds about 14 gallons, so that's only a savings of $0.70 per gallon. It just doesn't make much of a difference to me. Granted, when we were in high school it was $1.14 per tank, but the day-to-day savings doesn't give me much to celebrate.
Friend: How can you not care? That's like $4 a month!*sigh* Let me explain. Even if you're buying 5 tanks of gas every month - whew! - is $5 really going to BREAK YOU? Shut up! It's not a life-altering savings. You would be better off figuring out a way to buy only 3 tanks a month than driving around, hunting for the lowest gas price.
I don't know. I am a person of action. I see something I don't like in my life, I change it. I figure out a way around, through, or over the obstacle. I don't like whining, and so this will be the only rant for a while. I just don't UNDERSTAND why the milk costs or the gas costs are the cause of so much angst lately.
If you do the math, it doesn't matter that much! Go out and make an extra $5 a month and you're covered! $5! Come ON! Offer to walk your friends dog for a week and she'll give you $5 (hopefully more) and you'll have all your gas inflation covered for the month.
As a go-getter, I have trouble watching people complain their lives away without doing anything creative to stop the stress at the root.
Nice thoughts. Fixing stuff isn't easy, but whining doesn't usually fix anything.
Monday, April 28, 2008
Movies 'bout money -- good and bad
I expected In Debt We Trust to be an activist movie in the style of, say, Michael Moore or the Super Size Me guy. It was more like the latter, without even as much balance as the former.
Danny Schechter takes on the credit industry from the point of view that people who fall victim to crushing debt are hapless victims of an exploitative monster industry. While I don't disagree that Americans in particular have been buried by sometimes questionable practices of credit companies, I felt the film let the consumers off the hook too easily. Yes, people are sucked in by too-good-to-be-true offers which shouldn't be offered in the first place. Yes, people are sucked under by payday loans. But after all the reading I've been doing lately, the reality that spending less than you make is the key to staying afloat is virtually ignored. The film portrays slow death by debt as a virtual inevitability in American society.
I really did like the spooky prescience of the movie's portrayal of the housing bubble. It was made before the recent credit crunch, but predicted it precisely. It said sub-prime lending was the hot hot thing, but pointed out how ludicrous and ultimately doomed the whole scheme was.
All in all, I'd say pass on In Debt We Trust, unless you get a kick out of reinforcing a victim mentality.
On the other hand, I was angered and entertained by Life and Debt, which I found when I was looking for the other movie. I got the titles all mixed up.
Stephanie Black's film about how the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have affected Jaimaica taught me a lot. Stuff I didn't know about Jamaica, but more importantly, stuff I didn't know about the IMF and World Bank. I had no idea how those bodies worked and what they do to countries.
The movie felt balanced, yet outrageous. It was entirely sympathetic to Jamaica, and unflattering to the IMF. The World Bank and America come off like an evil empire. Sure, that's fashionable here in Canada, but it appeared to be backed up with fact. It has the same "holy sh!t, do Americans know that their country does this?!" impact that Michael Moore's films do, without the sense "oh, come on, dude, you must be kidding" angle that Moore sometimes brings.
If you're itchin' to get mad with a movie about debt, choose Life And Debt over In Debt We Trust.
Spend wisely, gang.
Labels: culture, entertainment, money
Saturday, April 05, 2008
Saving money like a Big Ass Superstar
Some of this knowledge/wisdom is from watching TV shows like "'Til Debt Do Us Part", and "Maxed Out". Some is from books like The Wealthy Barber. Some is from reading personal finance blogs. And some has been arrived at organically through trial and error. I can assure you that if I'd had this much sense ten years ago, I'd have a lot more wealth now. But, that's what growing up is about, huh?
Budget
Jerry Good taught me in Broadcast Management class that "if you can measure it, you can manage it." And it works the other way, too -- if you can't measure it, you can't expect to manage it. We bought Quicken Cash Manager 2007 more than a year ago, and I never really figured out how to work all the accounts and stuff. But I *did* find the budgeting section, and I love it.
We laid out our regular bills -- groceries, rent, car lease, car insurance, phone, cable/internet, power, bank fees -- and income -- mine and hers. We also considered bills that come up expectedly but not monthly -- cat food, apartment insurance, car registration. We also added some items for entertainment, gifts and dining.
Beyond that, though, we guesstimated how much a couple of vacations might cost ... and factored in a little overhead for emergencies and saving.
Quicken and a calculator broke the regularly expected expenses + savings + vacation + misc into a monthly chunk that would take care of the here and now, plus save for the future. It's those little changes that make the difference between treading water, swimming, sailing and navigating. We're no financial Copernicuseses yet, but we're well ahead of many who just hope there's money left at the end of the month.
Combine and conquer
Our incomes are different. Not a whole lot different anymore -- Amanda, a few years into her career, is about on par with me, nearly a decade and a half into mine -- but a little different. We figured out who's making what percentage of the combined household income. I think it came out to 52 vs. 48%. We applied those figures to the monthly household budget and figured out how much each of us would transfer to the shared chequing account. So, each payday, I put $x into the pot, and on her payday, Amanda puts $x-a bit into the pot. Our nut is covered, and whatever's left is ours to oversee individually.
Routine and automation
Until Amanda converted me to online banking, I paid all my bills by taking them to the bank machine, stuffing them in envelopes and putting them through the magic slot.
Now all the regular payees are set up in the online banking. As soon as a bill comes in from cable, phone, power ("hydro" to you in Ontario), it gets opened, paid, marked "paid", and filed in Scott's handy-dandy file-o-matic in the dungeon. We don't wait for a specific day to pay the bills -- the money's always there, so the peeps get their money.
Every payday, it's the same thing with our respective contributions to the household pot. We have it set up for an instant transfer, and kaboom, the household money is refreshed.
The only thing we write a cheque for is rent.
Several bills are set up for automatic payment -- car lease and car insurance are pulled out directly. And once a month, a lump sum gets transferred out of the pot and into our shared savings account, as a combination emergency fund/vacation fund. My life insurance also gets pulled directly from my main account.
Having the right accounts
Some may see this as overkill, but I have several accounts, all with the same bank, and Amanda has a set of her own as well:
- "Our" chequing
- "Our" savings
- My daily account
- My 'stash'
- My e-saving account
- Plus assorted credit cards and a bank line of credit
They each serve a purpose. Both "our" chequing and my daily account, IIRC, have unlimited or very-high-number-of free Interac transactions. That way I don't have to carry much cash. I think the monthly fee is $12. My e-saving account is a high-interest, online-only account for accumulating cash on the side. I can transfer in and out free of charge, and there's no monthly fee, but if I do something thoughtless and pay a bill straight out of the e-saving, I get nicked for $5 a shot. So, if my daily account is low, I just transfer over and pay away. The 'stash' account has been empty ever since I set up the e-saving. I just never got around to closing it.
Other Stuff I Do
I also have an automagic transfer of $50/pay from my daily account to my e-saving. It doesn't stay long, mind you, 'cuz I've been spending it faster than saving it. Hm.
I take part in the company's share purchase plan. As I see it, it's a helluva deal. The company matches 25% of my contributions in the first year, 33% in the second, and 50% thereafter. I can contribute 1-10% of my gross income, with after-tax dollars, each payday. The shares are purchased once a month at market value. I should've signed up for this years ago. I could be rich by now. But I only got on board last year. I'm pouring the maximum I can in -- 10%. It means my take-home pay has been cut noticeably, but with the company's share prices down recently, and the company kicking in 25% on top of what I put in, it's still a great deal. Really, where are you going to get a guaranteed 25% return on investment? 33%? 50%?! I think it's a great offer, and I'm going to stay in it as long as I can afford to.
I try keep my RRSP maxed out. I didn't contribute for a long time. But some inheritance money came my way, and I put it into the RRSP. I reinvested the resultant tax refund and kept going. Not too many years ago, I reached the limit. I'm sketchy on the math, but my 'pension adjustment' on my T4 is keeping my RRSP contribution limit stupidly low. I'm hoping that means my company pension plan is kicking ass. As it stands, my tax refund comes pretty close to topping up the RRSP limit.
My investments are not interesting. The bulk of my RRSP money is in what I'm told is a stable money-market fund, with the aim of using it toward a home down payment through that nifty first-time-buyer plan. The rest is in a balanced growth fund that is not growing very fast.
Other Ways I/we Save
- Pack a lunch. I take a lunch to work. A wrap, two or three fruits, yogurt.
- Take your coffee. Amanda brews up a pot of Tim's at home and takes it to work in a Thermos. Easily saving several dollars a week.
- Grocery shop once a week. We check the flyer, sketch out some meals for the week, make a list, and hit the store one time. Amanda gets most of the credit here, as I'm not holding up my end of the bargain when it comes to meal selection and preparation. If something is an especially good deal -- let's say a ham for less than half price -- we'll buy it, chop it up into three pieces, freeze it, and use it later. Hint for leftovers: affix a label indicating what's inside and when it was made.
- Walk, bike or take the bus. I help pay for the car, but I don't drive it. Amanda has to drive for work, so she does, which lets her earn money, so ... it all makes sense. Me, I can take the bus to work, and I usually walk home.
- I don't buy clothes. Not a recommended strategy, 'cuz I really *should* buy some clothes.
- Make do with what we've got. I'd love to have HDTV. But to do that, I'd have to get an HDTV. And digital cable. And HD service. And a digital cable HD PVR box, 'cuz my home theatre PC is fantastic for standard-def TV, but won't do HD as I understand the current technology. It's just not worth it right now. Regular TV is okay for now.
- Delay, delay, delay. If you don't need it absolutely immediately, put it off. Then put it off again. And again. Do this often enough and you might forget you needed it. You might realize you can do without it. Or at least you'll have enough time to research the hell out of whatever you're planning to buy.
- Research the hell out of whatever you're planning to buy. I've moved from 'careless' to 'cheap' to 'frugal'. I think I used to waste money. Then I think I used to buy the cheapest stuff I could find -- think Dollar Store or Bi-Way. Now I don't mind paying for something I want, but I want to make sure I'm not going to regret my purchase. It's about value, not price. There's a sign downtown that says something like "the regret of poor quality outlasts the joy of a bargain" .. something more eloquent, I'm sure.
- Buy used or refurbished. I think Kijiji and eBay are great. And I recently bought a refurbished JVC camcorder from TigerDirect.ca for about $150.
- Be a late adopter. Brand-new technology gadgets are often buggy in version 1, and also pricey. Wait a while and you'll get a bug-fixed version for less money. Need an example? Consider the ipod.
- I rent, not buy. Yeah, there's a whole debate about this on PF blogs. In theory, the money I'm not spending on home repairs, property taxes, mortgage interest and whatnot is being channeled toward other things. I don't know how much that's really doing.
- Have a partner. Buying for two, cooking for two, splitting the rent in two ... it can save you a bundle. Plus there's someone to keep you warm at night.
- Buy generic. I don't buy a lot of stuff, but if I can save a few bucks by getting the store-brand Psyllium Fibre Capsules over buying Metamucil, I'll do it.
- Be smart about ATMs. Don't hop from machine to machine. If you have the money in your account and you have the right account, go Interac at point-of-purchase. If you absolutely need cash, get some at your bank's ATM. Paying an extra $3 ($1.50 for the machine, $1.50 to your bank) to get $20 is almost as foolish as getting on the payday loan cycle.
- Use credit cards as convenience. The bank is willing to loan you money interest-free for a month if you promise to pay it off on time. That, my friends, is a good deal. Break the deal and you pay dearly.
- If you can't afford it, don't buy it. Save for it if you really want it. It'll give you more time to find a good bargain.
Where I "Waste" Money
- Cigarettes. No defense here. I'll save enough to buy a big-screen TV every year when I quit. Soon. I promise. Hell, the 5k run is a month away.
- Energy drinks and chocolate milk. I buy one of each almost every day at work. I suppose I could save a little by buying a case of energy drinks and a case of chocolate milk.
- Lottery tickets. The odd scratch ticket every few months doesn't worry me, but I've been playing the dream-home lotteries in Halifax for the past year, at $200-$250 a shot. I haven't won the house ..... yet.
Where I Could Do Better
- RRSP. I bet I could get a better mix in my portfolio. When this year's tax refund comes in, I plan on putting a chunk in an index fund or two, then making smaller biweekly contributions to take advantage of dollar-cost averaging.
- Outside investments. I have a bit of money floating around in my e-savings account that could be working harder for me. Since my RRSP is usually maxed out, I ought to find some kind of investment vehicle that'd put that cash to work. Then I could throw a few extra bucks at it when little snowflakes of cash come my way from outside work, selling on ebay, etc.
- Selling old stuff. I threw out *so much* stuff that was ebayable when I moved from Toronto to Halifax. There's unliquidated capital sitting at my parents' place in Stratford in the form of vintage TransFormers and unknown other collectibles.
- Life Insurance. My eyes glaze over when I read about life insurance. But I've read enough to suspect that I have the wrong kind of life insurance. The experts I've read suggest the whole-life plan that acts like an investment vehicle doesn't perform as well as getting cheap term insurance each year and investing the difference in an actual investment.
That's all that comes to mind right now. Any other hints?
Friday, April 04, 2008
Weird for having no debt? Not so much.
... and my credit cards are all paid off. In fact, one's overpaid by $66, 'cuz we had to get a refund for one of the Cuba excursions.
All in all, I'm all assets and no liabilities. Again. As usual. I have no debt.
Is that so strange?
Squawkfox wonders the same thing on her Personal Finance blog:
I must be weird. I don't have lines of credit, maxed-out credit cards, and most of my paycheck goes directly into savings. I do have nice things though. I purchased new furniture this year, I participate in an expensive sport, and I have a stunning diamond ring. So why am I worth six-figures while others shuffle debt?
Do I have a lucrative job? Nope. I make an average salary for my age group, according to the November 2007 issue of MoneySense Magazine.
Did I win the lottery or inherit buckets of money? Nope. I've never played the lottery, and my family is alive and well. Although I have been promised a pretty set of china tea cups from my grandmother.
Did I play the stock market and strike it rich on a flashy investment? Nope. I've invested small portions of money slowly over time. I invest in index funds and ETFs. I'm pretty boring about investing, actually.
Do I own a house, condo, or other real estate? Nope. I am a renter and have been renting for well over a decade.
Wonder how it can happen? Check out her entry. It makes a lot of sense.
Having no debt is a nice feeling. I'm sure it'll be a nice feeling to have a house, too, but for now, having no lingering financial obligations is pretty sweet. I don't feel like my life is lacking in luxury. I don't feel like I'm missing out. I'm getting a kick out of seeing my personal net worth climb, as our combined savings grows and our combined chequing account stays floating without overdraft.
Is it weird? Am I weird? I've never shied away from such a label, but in this case, I think it's something to be proud of, instead of resigned to.
Thursday, April 03, 2008
The People's Picasso of Havana



Labels: funny, money, photography, travel
Monday, March 17, 2008
This is not a Personal Finance blog
I started at Give Me Back My Five Bucks, run by krystalatwork. She's a young Vancouver woman who buried her debt in a hurry and is now ambitiously saving up emergency funds, travel funds, condo down payments and whatnot. She links to lots of other Canadian and American PF blogs.
One that appears chock full of great links is Quest For Four Pillars run by Mr. Cheap.
Articles at Millionaire Mommy Next Door made me question the conventional wisdom that home-buying is the best investment.
So, yeah, there's a lot out there. And a lot of these bloggers show their stats for all to see. I applaud them, though I'm not quite prepared to do that here.
While I'm proud to say that my RRSP is usually maxed out ... and that my spending habits are generally sensible and sustainable ... and that I'm doing what I can to save, like putting 10% of my gross income into the employee share purchase plan -- the one that matches 25% in the first year, 33% in the second, and I think 50% beyond that.
But in reality, we know that people are often more comfortable talking about their sex lives than about their bank accounts. I'm happy to share some generalities, but I'm not about to post my income stats here. I'm not comfortable sharing my salary with the world. Likewise, I don't want to know how much my coworkers are making. I just don't wanna know. If they're making more, I don't wanna know. If I'm making more, I don't wanna know. I know how I'm doing, and I'm curious what the industry average might be, but I don't want to tempt any hard feelings on the part of me or anyone I work with.
Having said that ... a tiny tiny bit of PF blogging from BigAss. I've read that knowing where you're starting is key to knowing how to get where you want to go. You dig?
So, I ordered up credit reports from Equifax and TransUnion. I messed up the paperwork on one, so it didn't come through ... but the other one arrived, and was 100% beautiful. No missed payments, no red flags, nothing to complain about. I have credit, and I use it wisely. I have no outstanding debts. I make my payments on time. I'm a good consumer.
Next, I went ahead and calculated my net worth. Well, not in excruciating detail -- I haven't added up the value of my physical 'assets' ... that box of Generation-1 TransFormers in mom and dad's garage is probably worth something astonishing, but I didn't factor it in. I also have not included the value of any insurance policies or pension plans. I'm frankly not certain where all that info is, nor do I understand whether it should be counted in my Net Worth calculations. I'm looking at more readily calculable stuff.
A nifty web site called Net Worth IQ lets you punch in the numbers and keep track of it all. I've been keeping track, loosely, for a few months, and here's my 'badge':
At least I *think* it's supposed to stick it up there. Anyway. If that doesn't work, you can see it here.
So, that's it. I'm not a Personal Finance Blogger. I may write stuff here 'n there, but I'm not going to strip my bank accounts naked the whole time. Would you? Let's hear your thoughts...
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
What's in your wallet?
So ... here's what's there right now.- One $20 bill
- Thirteen Halifax Metro Transit tickets
- Two (why two?) business cards for my financial advisor at RBC Royal Bank
- Air Miles collector card (collector since 05/98 and I've never cashed in my points)
- American Express Air Miles credit card -- more miles
- Citibank MasterCard -- had this one since I was about 19
- RBC Gold Visa -- just got this one and I've only used it once
- RBC client card #1 for my personal accounts
- RBC client card #2 for the shared accounts
- Nova Scotia Health card
- Ontario Health card in rough shape and useless
- Rogers Video membership mood card
- Video Difference membership card (excellent video store, BTW!)
- Blockbuster membership card (I doubt I've ever been to Blockbuster in Halifax)
- Company insurance card
- Staples Dividends card
- Hallmark Club Card
- Carlton Cards Club card
- Birth certificate
- Two of my business cards
- Toronto Police Service media card, expired 2004 but still looks cool
- M&M Meats key tag
- Picture of me and Amanda
- Picture of me and my sister, circa May 1995
- Picture of my sister and her hubby
- Nova Scotia driver's licence
- and, what a crumpled and torn receipt from December from what's probably Boston Pizza
Wow. That's a lotta stuff in one wallet!
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Pennies from heaven or money-grubbing desperation?
Some people have set standards - they won't pick up change unless it's more than a quarter. Or a dollar. Others just won't pick up money at all. I, on the other hand, clearly have no standards. I pick up money off the ground all the freaking time. Even pennies.
Me? Heck yeah. If it's a penny, I'll justify it by saying it's a luck thing. If it's anything more, it's a money thing.
It's also a karma thing from that time a few months ago when I left $60 sitting in the bank machine 'cuz I was in such a rush to grab my receipt .. and someone walked away with my money.
I was talking about lobby cameras today with a guy who works in the building, and he says his friend used to glue coins to the lobby floor and sit upstairs watching people try to pry the coins off the floor. Sounds like a blast -- and a YouTube project, actually -- but I wouldn't disrespect my own apartment building by gluing things to the tile without authorization.
Labels: money



The 2000 debut album 
