reading all these loan IDK if I wanna drown myself in loans trying to become a pilot
chase your dreams
THIS!!! If becoming a pilot is your dream you should pursue that! It will be worth it in the end. You have to live for yourself and not anyone else. Do what makes you happy
Money comes and goes... But if you don't seize these opportunities and chase your dreams you'll end up stuck at a boring desk job, browsing NT, and doing the same old thing every day for the next 40 years wondering, "what if I decided to take that risk and become a pilot?" Man up and take control of your destiny.
Take it from me. I've made some very risky financial decisions in the past 6 months. Some of these may end up being the worst financial decisions I've ever made. But for now, I'm doing alright.
-I maxed out a $15k credit card in December in order to start my own company when no one believed in the company/wouldn't invest in the cannabis industry. It was scary as hell knowing I dug myself in a hole that deep. Had lots of nights where I thought I may have made a huge mistake, but I believed in myself and kept pushing. 6 months later I currently have 0 credit card debt and my credit score has recovered.
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-I worked on my company a little bit every night when I got home from my day job and it got to the point were it became very real and I couldn't balance two jobs any more. I resigned from my $80k day job (GS-12 with federal government) two months ago. I'm currently unemployed.
-My company made it's public debut two months ago and we have a lot of traction. But, we still aren't open yet. We're just in the marketing phase and building out our location.
-I took out a $40k personal loan from my friend about a month ago to use as the company's working capital. Again, he wouldn't invest directly in the company because of the industry I am in but he was willing to give me the personal loan. It went straight from my bank account into the company's account. I now owe my best friend $40k under a legal contract, which I had to pay his lawyers to write up
-That $40k allowed me to keep things moving with the business and at this point, people who doubted me at first have seen this come to fruition. Those who were hesitant about investing, are now throwing money at me. They already missed out though. I used about $25k of that money to obtain financing from a national equipment financing & business working capital company. This company did $15M in cannabis loans last year and they have already done $20M in the first quarter of this year. I now have over $100k worth of lab equipment that will hopefully be paid off in the next four years. I'll be paying roughly $35k in interest over those 4 years, but, I kept my equity in the company.
-I'm 27 and in the past 6 months I just founded my own company in the fastest-growing industry in the US, on my own. I have one partner and we are 50/50 owners. I'm still $40k in debt to my best friend, and that has the potential to ruin our friendship. I went from having a good, safe job with a nice paycheck and good benefits to being unemployed for a few months. Almost lost my girlfriend multiple times because I'd come home from my day job and work on my company until I passed out from exhaustion. I've barely seen any friends or family during this time and have kept this a secret from most of them. I just told my parents what I've been up to all this time this past Sunday.
-Success doesn't come easy, no risk no reward. I'm the happiest I've ever been in my life and optimistic about my future. But I won't front... There are nights when I think to myself, "what have I gotten myself into here?" and sometimes it feels crazy. But those are the feelings that keep me motivated and determined to be successful.
Long story short, never work for a paycheck. Don't be like everyone else. Find what you love and find a way to get paid doing it. We aren't meant to be stuck in cubicles 8 hours a day. I'm never going back to that life.