The_Jed said:
I have a $30 flip phone that costs $30 per month. The kids' phones are $100 per month (old phones). I only use free streaming services; Tubi, Youtube, etc., no cable. I don't eat out or smoke or drink. I have a gym membership- $35/month. I don't have any credit cards. I've been living like this for a very long time and plan to continue doing so. My internet (at the moment) is $35 per month. Car insurance is just under $300 per month (will be investigating that). Utilities are usually just under $200/mo. Water is around $70/mo. The med bills have been paid down to 700-ish. The attorney is well into four digits. I bring home about $3,400 per month. I should be slowly rising up but stuff keeps breaking. Lately I've just been wondering if it's like this for everyone, is it really supposed to be this difficult?
I'm constantly shooting off apps for public sector jobs; I had an online interview a few days ago. Everything from the state, county, or city that I'm qualified for gets an app. Most fed jobs I've found require a degree. I've applied for several internal positions where I work but, I can't get an interview.
Sounds like you're doing all the right things, but perhaps it's time to do those right thing somewhere else? Where are you located at?
From my quick math, I see $1090 (including the 400 mortgage and 430 car payment mentioned up thread) - xxxx attorney fees, which is leaving less than $90 per month to feed, clothe, basics 3 people in today's food & clothing market, that's damned tough. That just doesn't seem possible to me.
3400*12 is $40,800, or ~$19.61/hr.
I haven't made $40k a year since 2005 or 6. That's damned tough. I mean, all the saving & scrimping in the world won't help in the monthly income is less than monthly expenditures, and it sounds like you've already been living in survival mode for years.
Again, I don't know where in the US you're located, so I just searched locally on Indeed.com for "Machine Maintenance" (since that sounds like what you're doing at the steel mill?). It looks like industrial maintenance techs up here in North East CT are starting at $30/hr which is $62,000/yr. Salaries listed at a quick search show upwards of $40 ($83,000).
Assuming the same math at $30/hr, now, you should have $5,200/mo. That gives you an extra $1800/mo. You put $580 into a RothIRA to max it out ($7000/yr), that'll leave you $1220 to live, have a bit of fun and agressively pay off your debts. Dump the rest into an index fund. If you start playing the Roth game now, you'll end up at 65 having invested $155,000, but having made $133,000 by the time you reach 65 (according to this calculator). Not a ton, but a good start on retirement at least!