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Old 04-12-2023, 09:13 AM   #23
Eddies66
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Location: Rancho Mirage, CA
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Default Re: Early Retirement

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeff Niceswanger View Post
Well, it just not the same Jim. At the age of 13 in 1969 I got my paper route . At first I inherited 100 customers. By my third year I had 200. Zanesville built a ton of low income housing and my route was smack in the middle of them. So before high school I delivered them and on Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday night I collected the dues. There was no such thing as pay by mail or Online banking. That netted me enough funds to go buy my first car (at 16 years). Pictured below. Paid cash money. A NICE low mileage SPORTS CAR was 1695.00. It was a couple years old but see the difference? These kids will never enjoy what we did. Nice stuff from crappy jobs.We didn't need to have the government to pay off student loans and falling for all the gambling commercials. It took next to no money to have a BALL. No, kids now are being ask to save every dime. We are asking them, well, telling them to do something that we absolutely did not have to do. Heck at just a bit older I spent every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday nights in the local establishments chasing girls till closing times. Nascar races, Ski Trips, Rock Concerts,Killer Home Stereo's and nice cars. My next car was a 73 fully Loaded L-82 Corvette that took one weeks pay a month. And that was a 3 year loan as that's as long as allowed back then. Not to mention I worked at the biggest craphole in Zanesville.Given the advise their being told, kids of today will never own anything fun, or DO anything fun till they're ready for a grave, and thats so sad. I wouldn't have traded my youth for anything.I'm so glad I was born when I was. WE Were lucky

I believe there is and was merit in your statement. We bought our oldest daughter her first car for $2800, she wasn't making that much in her part-time job to pay for it. The car made it through two kids in college. Like yourself I bought my first car, '55 Chevy, off a used car lot for $495. Took it to college but needed a project car for my Industrial Ed classes. I had been working for NAPA for a couple years and eyed a '63 Split-window Corvette at a body shop that I mixed paint for. No engine or trans and no title, bought it for $900, applied for an abandon title, came back clear. Went looking for a little more reliable transportation and found on a campus bulletin board a 1969 Nova for $1600, turns out to be an SS L78 396, this is the car I wish I still had. The young lady that owned it said it didn't get very good gas mileage. Kids these days will never have the joy of educating themselves with the help of an ole car. Fond memories, if I had 10 bucks on Friday night, I could top off my car with Chevron Custom and buy a case of Coors long necks...life was good.
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