by I_Like_Plants » Wed 06 Feb 2008, 15:59:28
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mekrob', '
')But let's see about me:
$600 a month for rent and utilities.
$100 a month for food.
$50 a month for gas and bus fare.
$500 a year for school supplies and clothes.
Around $9500 a year. Nothing else I can think of. No insurance, no tuition, no fees (or taxes). Do I count as poor? It'd be hard to say so given how great I feel and live.
This is how much I spend. I make a little more, but still right around the poverty line. I saved about a grand in the past year.
Next year, I'm hoping to get down to just buying a bike and no gas, so I'll come out even, but that bike should be a nice investment for the future. I can probably loss a few hundred on books, clothes and food (pssh, only rich people have sauce with spaghetti or sugar with their porridge).
Yeah, that's how I lived when I was a student. I did take some loans, but could have puttered along on grants OK I think. Wish I'd shitcanned all the stupid tech and calculus type shit, and taken art and music classes - those will feed you, tech won't.
But it was a pretty nice life, being a "professional student" is a good way to slack off, you work and live, but you're also doing new things instead of the same old trudge to/from the workplace every day.
I always had $1000 in the bank so I'd have a few months' rent if I lost my $5 an hour job, but I figured I'd always just find another $5 an hour job! So I had far more security then those making much more money. In the recession of the early 80s of course I wasn't making that much, $3.50 an hour then $4. It was a big jump up to get to $5.
The thing to realize is, your real pay will go DOWN over the years. Your prospects for the future will go DOWN. The economy will go DOWN. Farmin' fishin' fiddlin', makin' shoes, stuff like that is the future. So college is a good way to slack off, and learn a bit, but the whole idea of going to work for IBM etc is utter bullshit! So enjoy life here and now.