Tag: life lessons

  • $200 in Exchange For More Time and Memories

    What’s the most money you’ve ever spent on a meal? Was it worth it?

    Before every Outback Steakhouse closed down in my state, it was the restaurant that my family would go to for lunch and dinner. It was the closest, and one of the better, sit down restaurant where it would be roughly a 20 minute drive for both sides of our family to get there.

    We used to buy a lot of appetizers before the entrees and then pack in dessert. For 2 people in a HCOL state, $200 is roughly the norm, including tip as well.

    The reason Outback was special was because it had been where I used to take my grandpa for his birthdays – I wasn’t making much money, but it was worth spending the little money I was earning – to hang out and talk stories with him.

    Good food, good company, what else could anyone ask for?

    I hadn’t hung out with my grandparent’s on my Mom’s side often, I usually didn’t feel like going to visit their house because I just preferred to stay home. Although, I used to work the night shift before, so I couldn’t hang out regardless during the week.

    Just so happen, my grandpa’s birthday landed on my days off, so I called him to hang out and we met up. He’d try to ask me if we could do lunch whenever I was free, but our days wouldn’t always line up because of our jobs. Gramps wasn’t retired yet, he was pretty young, so the movie productions would call him to work and I had my job to do too.

    Anyways, I remember some of the stories he used to tell me:

    • His time in the US Army after her graduated high school.
    • When he was stationed in Japan and in South Korea during the Propaganda war between North and South Korea, I think. (I remember the propaganda part, that was crazy!)
    • He was one of the few American soldiers that was able to compete, and win, in the Korean soldier’s Taekwondo military competitions.
    • He used to be the unofficial quartermaster in his unit. Whatever you needed: money, steaks, cigarettes, beer, he was able to get it and provided. He even remembered selling to his CO’s and they wouldn’t bother.

    I remember that he shared a few of his regrets. Gramps was a stubborn guy, like it was either his way or the highway kind of stubborn. He wished he made different choices if he had the chance. He told me that he:

    • Wished he stayed the full 20 years of active service to have gotten the pension and benefits from the military. He only completed 17 years.
    • Instead of joining the movie productions as an equipment driver, he wished he became a Stevedore instead. He mentioned they had great benefits and were part of a good union, but he was young and arrogant then.

    My Grandpa seemed vulnerable during those moments. I know that, as he got weaker, no one took him seriously at the house. I would tell my younger cousins that, if Gramps was as young as he was when I came into the picture, they’d be shitting themselves.

    They didn’t believe me because the Gramps they grew up with was very different from the Gramps I grew up with.

    At family gatherings, I’d help him cook. He’d show me how he did things, be it steak or making shrimp tempura from scratch. I listened when I was there because it seemed no one else was listening. Not even my younger, and his favorite of us, cousins.

    We recently had his funeral – he was in and out of the hospitals and we all thought he was getting better – and it didn’t look like he was dead in his casket. He looked like he was sleeping instead.

    I waited to see if he was going to sit up and have this as some sick joke because we didn’t visit as often like we said, make us come together in a morbid way. But he didn’t. He didn’t wake up.

    Much like my other grandpa who died when I was graduating Elementary school, though he had Alzheimer’s, I’ll eventually forget this grandpa’s stories: I’ll forget how he sounds like, what he smelled like, how he used to play music and sing. I might eventually forget the songs he sang along to too. I know what they are, I had most of them on my first IPhone in high school, but I won’t be able to hear him sing along anymore.

    Just like my other grandpa who passed years prior, the only memory I can remember is when he used to hum to himself. Just a tune when his mind was good. I used to copy him intuitively to remember. Even his tune is a broken forgotten melody I struggle to pull to the surface.

    Even though I didn’t have the money then, I could have made more money, made more time for him. But I was more worried about my paternal Grandma I lived with because she was much older than my maternal grandpa that I thought we’d have more time.

    The last time he was strong was when we celebrated my 28th birthday at the Cheesecake Factory last year. I was working the night shift when he passed away in the hospital this year.

    My parents told me the morning after I finished work, and on my day off, that he passed and I asked them why they didn’t call me. They said that they didn’t want to tell me while I was working and that they didn’t want me to remember my gramps’s last moments with his passing.

    I could have at least been there, but that time passed and now he’s gone. I don’t think of him much these days, but when I do, I still cry. Like I didn’t grieve enough at his funeral.

    I wish I had more time, I wish I didn’t waste what time I had, and I’d trade all the money I have and more if I could have been around more. But I can’t and I’ve learned from my mistakes with my surviving Grandmas. Do more than I did before.

    Even though I had spent $200 at Outback to celebrate the few birthdays the two of us went for him, it was worth the memories we have and I miss him.

  • The Stratagem Begins: From Scarcity to Financial Empowerment: Part 1:

    The Stratagem’s Budgeting Strategy:

    Welcome, Co-conspirators, to the Financial Acquisition category of the ‘Stratagem’s Archive’. Here, I shall unveil the blueprints of my journey to forge wealth and refine my financial acumen.

    But first, a candid admission: I used to be a money miser, a penny pinching devotee. Overcoming this was a challenge that spanned years. Yet, through relentless study, meticulous observation, and the crucible of trial and error, I have diligently forged my budgeting muscles. I now wield my resources with precision, aggressively dismantling my debts while simultaneously expanding my reserves.

    The very tactics I’ve deployed are perfect for those embarking on their own financial campaigns, for several reasons:

    • A solid foundation: It builds a stronghold of accountability.
    • Field-tested Principles: You can adapt my proven methodologies, calibrating them to your unique objectives.
    • Accelerated Conquests: Bypass years of independent struggle by learning directly from my tactical missteps.

    What I’ve Learned From Trial and Error: A Mastermind’s Reckoning:

    My path to becoming financially adept – competent, confident, and literate – was fraught with gaps, bumps, and unseen traps. While I do not claim the title of a financial oracle, I have discovered how to command my capital with a select arsenal of tools: the strategic deployment of cash over credit, the unerring guidance of sound judgement, and a humble calculator.

    At the time of this writing, I am systematically eradicating $16,000 of outstanding debt. This includes just under $4,000 in credit card debt, burdened by a formidable 25.26% Annual Percentage Rate(APR), and a personal loan nearing $12,000, at a slightly less hostile 8.70% APR. The shift from my family’s domain to my own studio apartment necessitated a total recalibration of my spending and savings protocols.

    Consider this: my previous credit card usage, spanning rent, groceries, utilities, gas, subscriptions, online courses, and various indulgences, led to a critical decision. I elected to holster my credit card. It remains in my wallet – a symbolic presence – yet I’ve disciplined myself not to reach for it. My superior alternative? Cash. It is, undeniably, king.

    I bestow upon cash this regal title for several tactical advantages:

    1. The Visceral Command: cash compels you to experience the “pain of paying” or “tangible loss.” Unlike a digital transaction, paying with physical currency forces you to witness and feel the fruits of your labor depart from your grasp. Your wallet lightens. This act alone forces a ruthless prioritization of your expenditures.
    2. Eradicating Self-deception: cash thwarts the insidious illusion fostered by credit card’s “buy now, pay later” deception. The notion that money is “just numbers on a screen” is precisely how one becomes ensnared in debt’s relentless, revolving clutches.

    A Look Into a Mastermind’s Day: Deploying Cash With Precision:

    When I embark on my weekly supply acquisition – as a singular entity, unburdened by dependents(a crucial distinction for context) – I execute a precise cash withdrawal. I procure between $200-$300 and strategically distribute it among four distinct envelopes:

    1. Guilt-Free Spending: My personal allocation for any desired acquisition (a concept masterfully coined by Ramit Sethi, author of I Will Teach You to be Rich, whose work I actively employ).
    2. Giving: Building a charitable fund, for cultivating my “generosity” muscles.
    3. Blog Fund: A dedicated reserves for my digital empire, offsetting domain costs and securing future compensation.
    4. Necessities: The bulk of my withdrawals are deployed here. Sustenance, fuel, clean attire, and hygiene products are the pillars of daily operations.

    Allow me to illustrate a typical deployment: I allocate $20 to each of my four envelopes for the week, leaving me with $220. My next move is a reconnaissance of my vehicle’s fuel gauge. If my gas tank registers at or below the halfway mark, I immediately set aside $40 for replenishment. Should my fuel reserves be sufficient, that $40 is repurposed for laundry, converting into the necessary quarters for a clean uniform. Following these maneuvers, I am left with $180 for grocery provisions.

    I maintain a meticulous inventory of my apartment’s assets and deficiencies. If food reserves are low for the week, provisioning sustenance becomes the paramount objective. If soap, toothpaste, cleaning agents, or other hygiene products are scarce, these immediately ascend the priority ladder.

    Before each shopping expedition, I activate my phone’s calculator – my digital co-pilot.I precisely estimate the cost of each item I intend to acquire. This provides a crucial pre-tax approximation of my total expenditure, preventing unforeseen overruns. For instance, my recent grocery list, calculated using sticker prices, yielded an estimate of $160.80. With the application of taxes, the finally tally reached $168.38. I maintain a $20 contingency fund because the exact tax burden remains unknown until the final transaction, and I refuse to breach my cash parameters.

    This iterative process, executed with each shopping foray, has sharpened my ability to discern true value from fleeting desire. I can acquire what I deem essential, but I cannot acquire everything. This is a vital distinction, for it reveals that many items merely flirt with the “want” category rather than the need. This self-awareness is not a limitation, but a profound step towards becoming a mindful and intentional architect of your financial dominion.

    In Conclusion: Your Move, Co-conspirator:

    You’ve witnessed the power of conscious transactions, the foundational truth that lies within the simple act of cash. This is merely the first brick in your empire. For those with the ambition to command their financial future, the knowledge within the Stratagem’s Archive is indispensable.

    Decimating debt: Learn the precise tactics I’ve employed to eliminate debt and reclaiming your financial power:Eradicating A Burden: Eliminating Personal Debt to Ascend:

    The question is not if you can build your empire, but if you possess the will. Begin your deeper immersion now. Share your thoughts and experiences in the comments below. Let’s begin a productive discussion, and it is time for the Stratagem’s Archives to close. Until opening day, co-conspirators.

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  • Some Days I Don’t Want to Be Here — On Surviving When Everything Else Feels Heavy

    I Don’t Have Any Answers

    Welcome, fellow archivists.

    This isn’t going to be a post full of strategies or 5-step solutions. I don’t have answers. I don’t have any neat, Instagram-worthy fixes for feeling worthless, angry, exhausted, or like a failure.

    All I have is the truth: I’m still here. I show up. That’s it.

    When There’s No Outlet That Works

    Every day, I feel like crying. Or screaming. Or fighting someone. Or curling into a ball and disappearing.

    Most days, I don’t do any of it. I keep it inside. I go to work. I lift boxes. I nod. I breathe through the rage.

    It feels like that, at work, the only time I’ll be acknowledged is: being asked to pick up someone else’s slack, when my mind blanks out and I wasn’t paying attention to what I was doing, or when I make a mistake and that immediately overshadows ALL of the good work I’d done prior.

    Sometimes I don’t even feel angry — I’m just so tired that people assume I’m mad.

    But truth is? I’ve tried the healthy outlets.

    I’ve done the journaling. The walking. The meditating. The deep breathing. The exercising. The learning. The “focus on your goals” grindset.

    I’ve tried cold showers. Better sleep. Better food.

    And it all helps… but it’s not enough. Not when the storm keeps coming back. Not when my mind is so convinced that I’m not worth keeping or being around.

    I Keep Trying Anyway

    I try to channel this torrent of emotions into my projects:

    • Writing D&D prompts I may never run.
    • Trying to code, even though I spent 10 years thinking I wasn’t smart enough.
    • Taking online courses that might help one day.
    • Working two jobs.
    • Keeping myself occupied so I don’t fall into that deep, silent well again.

    But most of the time, I’m not healing. I’m just surviving.

    Mostly I’m surviving. If you want to read more about these slow projects and quiet experiments, I sometimes write about them in Letters from the Void.

    This Pain and Anger Has A Name

    I would often ask myself the same question over and over again;

    What do I have to be angry about?

    That question, that right there, is called “Comparative Guilt.”

    This guilt would trick me, maybe it tricked you too, into thinking that I’m not suffering enough as someone going through real suffering to matter.

    I have so much good in my life:

    • I have caring and supportive family.
    • I’ve been living on my own for a few months.
    • I chose myself over staying in toxic and diminishing friendships.
    • I’ve started my own blog.
    • I’m working 2 jobs to aggressively get out of $15,000 of debt.
    • I’ve been investing in my retirement and my present for 2-3 years now.

    So, what should I be angry, upset, or numb over? I’ve got it so good, someone would want to trade spots with me.

    That’s the guilt trying to tell me that I’m not enough, even though I already struggle with combating feeling like a failure, worthless, and not good enough on the daily. It’s trying to say, “give up, you’re not worth it.”

    But I don’t give up, I’m stubborn like that. I might be a glutton for punishment because feeling angry, upset, or numb might be the only things I can feel these days. For now, that is enough, until I’m able to learn how to smile and feel content or joy again.

    Living Is The Loudest Rebellion I Have

    I’ve started believing that the biggest “f*** you” to a world that seems to want you to disappear… is to not disappear.

    Not to win. Not to thrive. Not to be impressive.

    Just to keep existing, even when it hurts. Even when nothing helps. Even when you don’t want to.

    There’s no power move louder than refusing to vanish — even if you’re dragging yourself through the day.

    If You’re Still Here Too…

    Then maybe you’re like me.

    You don’t have the answers.

    You’re angry and exhausted and worn down.

    But you still show up. Somehow.

    And that counts for something, even if no one sees it. Even if you forget why.

    This post isn’t here to fix you.

    It’s just a reminder:

    If all you did today was survive, that’s still resistance.

    A Note For Fellow Archivists

    If any part of this piece resonates, I’d love to invite you to pause for a moment and reflect on your own journey.

    What part of your story feels messy, uncertain, or unfinished right now? Where are you weary, wondering, or wandering? What small reminder do you need today that you don’t have to fit neatly into anyone’s expectations?

    You don’t have to share your reflections out loud — sometimes it’s enough just to notice them for yourself. But if you’d like, you’re always welcome to write them in the comments, or even send them my way privately. This space is here so that we can remind ourselves and each other: you’re not alone in this.

    If you’ve found something meaningful here, liking, sharing, or subscribing helps fellow wanderers find this little pocket of the internet too. And if you subscribe, you’ll also receive Letters from the Void, my newsletter where I share more quiet reflections, behind-the-scenes projects, and updates before they appear anywhere else.

    However you choose to engage — silently reading, reflecting privately, or joining in the conversation — you’re part of this archive. Thank you for being here.