Single Girl Life | My Week Ending Sep 28, 2018: Regrets, Resignation, Murphy Brown

Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey. In case you're just joining us, here's a little bit about me.  I am a single 30-something, openly Christian, hesitantly immigrant-y, human woman. I enjoy watching TV while eating takeout, and I want to retire early. I currently work as a consultant in a tele-health call center making around $40/hr. I started my professional life in 2015 at the ripe ole age of 31 after a few false starts. I spent 2016 paying off about $10,000 worth of credit card debt. I spent 2017 paying off about $20,000 in private student loans; I still have about $300,000 in federal student loans for which I am currently on an income-based repayment plan for the next 25 years, give or take.  I started really getting into savings and investing late 2017 when I stumbled upon the FIRE (financial independence, retire early) community.  In 2018, I made the decision to try to save for a sabbatical and maybe if all goes well continue the journey to early retirement.  Along this journey, I give weekly more personal than finance updates just like this one. Come along with me, I urge you!
My Week

Monday – It was a bittersweet weekend. If I’m counting my blessings, I was blessed to have housing, food, electricity..etc. It was a bitter weekend because I spent all of it recovering from the physical pain of the week. I could not sit at all. I spent all of Saturday and all of Sunday alternating laying on my back and laying on my stomach. Toileting was fun. Eating was also in bed on my stomach. There were a lot of tears. A lot.  I regret my surgery. I traded one problem for twelve more that will now likely linger forever.

Tuesday – So many time-out from work scenarios playing around in my head. I started with taking a reckless 6- week personal leave of absence; then just resigning; then resigning and asking to go to part time (2 days a week); to seeking FMLA; to now thinking of ideal scenario: 6 weeks off + 2 days a week for up to 6 months while seeking another job with no customer service and work from home possibility preferably at same or higher salary.

Wednesday – Started morning off in tears, per usual it seems lately. Ugh, this again. Went to same day doctor’s appointment to address this ongoing butt pain and was frustrated that I couldn’t ask for what I really wanted. I burst into tears twice during appointment and they tried to prescribe me an anti-depressant. Ugh, this is my life. All I want is a doctor’s note so I can take some time off work.

Thursday – Yesterday was not a great day. Have drafted resignation letter. Took the day off to think about it and my butt still hurts. It’ll take me another 7 days to get over the emotional debacle that was yesterday’s office visit. Hadn’t thought about blog since Sunday and after 7p took a quick gander. Haven’t missed much. Didn’t do any of my blogging challenge this week. Took a sick week off from the blog.

Friday – Yay no granulation tissue, so maybe my 30 days of going gluten free worked! Today’s doctor’s office visit was a mild success. Praise be! Of note, Murphy Brown premiere from last night was awesome. Hillary Rodham Clinton was on it and her bit was gold! #youcouldahadme Thought more about applying for Catholic Relief Services. Am terrified about taking off 6 months from work. Sought forbearance on my loans just in case I go through with this.  More Aunty MERJ stuff popped up that I had to do. Started some of those tasks but have follow-up calls to make. Always follow-up calls!! Tuning out for the weekend, gonna catch up on some On-Demand.

TV this week: Murphy Brown, House Hunters, Cybil, Married at First Sight
Takeout this week: $0

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5 Must Reads for Wed, Sep 26, 2018

Most popular post on My Early Retirement Journey this week: Sabbatical 2020: In Which I Take Back My Life

Wednesday Weekly is a round up of what I stumbled upon this week on the world wide web because sharing resources and information is what the internet is all about.

WHAT I STUMBLED UPON THIS WEEK

Can Economists and Humanists Ever Be Friends? (The New Yorker)


How to Change Your Mind (Brainpickings)

WOMEN ON THE WEB


THIS BLOGGING BUSINESS

Why You Should Consider or Reconsider Reddit (Rockstar Finance)


Enjoy? Follow/ Like/ Subscribe
My Early Retirement Journey- #singlegirllife

 

Single Girl Life | My Week Ending Sep 21, 2018: Hurricane Florence, Tai Chi, Blogging Challenge

Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey. In case you're just joining us, here's a little bit about me.  I am a single 30-something, openly Christian, hesitantly immigrant-y, human woman. I enjoy watching TV while eating takeout, and I want to retire early. I currently work as a consultant in a tele-health call center making around $40/hr.

I started my professional life in 2015 at the ripe ole age of 31 after a few false starts. I spent 2016 paying off about $10,000 worth of credit card debt. I spent 2017 paying off about $20,000 in private student loans; I still have about $300,000 in federal student loans for which I am currently on an income-based repayment plan for the next 25 years, give or take.

I started really getting into savings and investing late 2017 when I stumbled upon the FIRE (financial independence, retire early) community.  In 2018, I made the decision to try to save for a sabbatical and maybe if all goes well continue the journey to early retirement.  Along this journey, I give weekly more personal than finance updates just like this one. Come along with me, I urge you!
My week

Monday – Worked 8 hours. Then spent 8 hours on one blog post! The post itself probably only took about 40 minutes to 1.5 hours but I wanted to add a lead magnet and I could not get MailChimp to cooperate. And the next thing I knew 8 hours had gone by; it was 5a; and I was at the same place I started. I would like to get better at recognizing these senseless rabbit holes. I had set a timer earlier that evening for 60 minutes on Rockstar. Then it was just going to be another 60 minutes on the blog post. That came and went! The glorious life of a non-profit blogger! Anyone have a more intuitive email service than MailChimp?  I am just not a fan of the double opt-in. I don’t like it as a reader and I don’t want to put future readers through it.

Tuesday -  Worked 8 hours today. Saw a note to myself from May 2018 that said I was DEFINITELY going to go on a six-month sabbatical starting Oct 2018. Ha! If old me could see me now.

Wednesday – Should it hurt this much to get through the day. Haven’t gotten through as much television watching as I thought I would this week. I feel completely insulated from the fact that  Hurricane Florence occurred in my state. It didn’t affect me personally and I barely noticed any changes in the weather. I used to think I would want to volunteer with the Red Cross Disaster Relief when I leave the workforce, but now I’m not so sure.

Thursday – Went to Tai Chi last night. So many words. I thought it would be a bit more mindless and I’d get a good stretch. I’m just a bit more achy in actuality.  Put myself out there on Rockstar Finance Forums to announce a 10 day blogging challenge. Feeling very exposed. Zombie-me has returned. Haven’t got much TV in this week. Womp, womp. Don’t know why I decided to challenge myself to grow the blog this month. Was planning to relax and enjoy television shows.

Friday- Oh, glorious Friday! I spent way too much time on blog tasks this week. I only budgeted 2 hours a day…but two hours tended to bleed into three or four hours, eight hours one night. First complete week of my new schedule. I will say having leftover food from my vacation last week helped make dinner time a little easier. Less stress trying to cobble together a nutritious meal after a full work day.  That’s it. Another ordinary week in the life of a single girl!
TV and Takeout

TV this week: 90 Day FiancĂ©, Alone Together
Takeout this week: $11 (Peruvian chicken + rice)
Your turn

How was your week? What are some things you feel insulated from?

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3 Things I Lust For After Watching Netflix's Terrace House

So if you haven't yet watched it, the latest season of Netflix's Terrace House is available for binge watch. It's in Japanese with English subtitles, and it's really good. For those of you who miss the original Real World on MTV before it became too naughty and predictably acrimonious for this elder millennial, Terrace House is your Japanese solution.

About Terrace House


Terrace House follows six Japanese-speaking strangers, beautiful as to be expected as this is television after all, as they pursue their dreams of love, friendship, or sense of purpose. The best scenes seem to happen around regular family-style dinners and the in the designated boys' room or girls' room. Here the beautiful strangers openly discuss with varying levels of seriousness their plans to pursue each other or their individual goals.  For example, in one season, there was a Japanese-born Los-Angeles-based actor seeking to find "a love worth dying for." In another season, a female ice-hockey player was seeking to bring recognition and awareness to ice-hockey in Japan.

Intertwined with all this are datos (dates), and inevitably as with most strangers-in-a-house series romance unfolds along the way. What is shocking is how PG it all is compared to American television! It takes almost three months sometimes for even the first date to happen, let alone a meek first kiss. But the swelling of the romance over time is what keeps you hooked, at least it does me. That and the exposure to various aspects of Japanese culture makes this show a love worth missing work for!

The problem is after a five-episode binge, I find myself lusting after their life and succumbing to a daydream of my own making.

My real life


In my real life I slog away at my day job and come home and slog away at this here blog, hoping and praying that one day it means something. And if not that, pays something. My last great venture was when I created my first Sunday Funnies - The Life Cycle of A Corporate Drone comic strip. Who knew it would foreshadow events to come. Shortly after it was posted, I ended up having to drag my mattress to the bare floor to sleep after waking up that morning with searing back pain. It felt like I had slept on a bed of hot coals. Events like these or stupid minute things that happen at work but seem so big at the time make me think more about what else I can do accelerate My Early Retirement Journey.

However the numbers don't lie. Compound interest takes time. Thus I soothe myself with a crafty daydream or two.  Instead of what I would do with a million bucks, I consider what I would do with one million hours. So after a few sleepless nights, anxious about the next workday, and in physical pain, I let my mind wander on what my life could look like if I actually did leave the workforce on my own terms. It changes day to day, but inspired by my latest binge-watch of Terrace House, here's what's playing.

What I'd rather be doing instead


#1 Learn Japanese.

It's a Japanese show so all the cast members speak Japanese. Many of them are half Japanese and in the Hawaii season, many of them were also Americans.  I like the staccato of the Japanese language, and I was a linguistics major in college so language has been a long-time interest. I think learning a new language at this stage in my life would at least stimulate my left-brain. It would be both a mental and creative challenge and one I would enjoy. I had previously considered moving to South America to improve my now waning command of the Spanish language, but after Terrace House I want to learn Japanese!
#2 Spend a season in Nagano after learning Japanese.

Naturally, if I had one million hours, I would have time to travel. Travel isn't high on my list at the moment, but if I had nothing but time, I suspect it would creep up on said list. The show takes place in a quaint looking town called Karuizawa in the Nagano prefecture of Japan. From what I've seen, it's a four season town, with beautiful mountainous landscapes and parks and trees and nature for days. Many a datos has involved a nature escape.  Nagano also speaks to a budding desire of mine to live in a mountain retreat and do yoga all day. It seems like the perfect spot for that.
#3 Make and eat loco moco.

On the Aloha State season, the new cast of beautiful strangers was based out of Hawaii and the dining experiences were mouth watering. Every other meal involved some sort of brown sauce, my favorite kind of sauce. The dish du jour was Hawaii's loco moco. If you've never seen or tasted it, you must Google it or watch the show for high def visuals. I couldn't find a photo to do it justice. It's essentially rice with hamburger and delicious gravy topped with an over easy egg. My mouth is watering just typing this.  After watching the show, I did bumble around the single girl kitchen to concoct my version, but that was a fail. I obviously need to visit Hawaii to have it done right!
Your turn

What about you, if you were suddenly blessed with one million hours of free time, what would you rather be doing?

Related content: How Design-Thinking Can Inspire Your Early Retirement Journey

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(Originally published on 14Aug2018; updated 19Sep2018 MERJ)

Single Girl Money | Sep 2018 Savings and Investment Update

Hey there! Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey. In case you’re just joining us, here’s a little bit about me.  I am a single 30-something, openly Christian, hesitantly immigrant-y, human woman. I love watching TV while eating takeout, and I want to retire early. I currently work as a consultant in a tele-health call center making around $40/hr. I started my professional life in 2015 at the ripe ole age of 31 after a few false starts. I spent 2016 paying off about $10,000 worth of credit card debt. I spent 2017 paying off about $20,000 in private student loans; I still have about $300,000 in federal student loans for which I am currently on an income-based repayment plan for the next 25 years, give or take.  I started really getting into savings and investing late 2017 when I stumbled upon the FIRE (financial independence, retire early) community.  In 2018, I made the decision to try to save for a sabbatical and maybe if all goes well continue the journey to early retirement.  Along this journey, I give all sorts of updates, just like this one.

This is the September 2018 Update of my savings and investments balances, i.e. my personal capital. I don’t call it net worth because my massive student loan debt keeps me at a negative net worth and frankly that’s discouraging.

I am getting a little faster at Excel, so this update did not take quite as long to chart as my June 2018 Savings and Investment Update.  We'll utilize a similar structure here as well. Let's get into it!

Let’s quickly recall some budget items:

2018 Savings goal: $37,000/yr (2017: no goal)
Monthly savings contributions: $3115/mon

q3investmentchart-myearlyretirementjourney

When you add in my Safety Net Fund + Regular Savings and Checking, the amount is a little more.

q3investmentchart2-myearlyretirementjourney

 
Am I on target?

Let's do some quick math together.

My savings goal was to save $37,000 this year.

I finished 8 out of 12 months. So that is (8/12) x $37,000 = $24,667 that should have been invested by now.

Let's see:

Dec 2017 end (investments): 51,333

Aug 2018 end (investments): 83,981

Difference: 32,648 (YTD target: $24,667)

Am I on target? Yes! (this includes interest accrued but still on target)

Notes and trends. Fortunately, I am on target and trending upwards. Praise be! Over the last eight months, I've gotten more comfortable with contributing the max to my traditional 401k (after much hemming and hawing at the beginning of the year). I have become a tad bit more comfortable with my brokerage account. Not where I want to be mentally, but I still am funneling extra cash there. So that is trending upward nicely. Like most people in FIRE, all my savings and investment contributions are automated so I don't see it. That's the main purpose of having a second bank. I use that to make automatic contributions to my brokerage account.

I don’t really count my checking and savings amount yet. I see that as my safety net fund. Experts recommend 6 months. I went ahead and saved for about 1 year of expenses ($30,000) for a couple of reasons. First, it was a default choice because I had that first 6 months in CDs and I didn’t want to cash them out when I first started investing in Dec 2017. Secondly, I have this fantasy of just quitting my job and in case I do, I’d like to have 6 months readily accessible. I mean I probably won’t, but sometimes humans do crazy things. Also, both my brokerage account and 401k are using my traditional retirement age of 65 to allocate my funds at a risky 90% in stocks. I keep going back and forth, but in short, it makes me feel better to have one year’s expenses on hand. I know the compound interest lost is causing investment aficionados to gasp in horror, but again, I’ve only been investing “actively” for about eight months now. That’s all folks!

Questions? Comments? What about you...have you hit your targets at your Fall check-in?

Wednesday Weekly: September 19, 2018

Most popular post on My Early Retirement Journey this week: Blog Update | Sep 2018: 6 Months, 0 Dollars, 6,000 Pageviews

Wednesday Weekly is a round up of what I stumbled upon this week on the world wide web because sharing resources and information is what the internet is all about.

WHAT I STUMBLED UPON THIS WEEK

Robbing an Apple Store Looks Exactly as Easy as You'd Expect (Gizmodo)


Forget a Fast Car. Creativity Is the New Midlife Crisis Cure. (The New York Times)


WOMEN ON THE WEB

Why Do All These Women Keep Accusing Me of Sexual Harassment? (Sarah Cooper)


THIS BLOGGING BUSINESS

101+ Things I Do As A Full-Time Blogger (Fitnancials)


2 high paying affiliate programs for bloggers in any niche (One Fine Wallet)


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Single Girl Money | Sep 2018 Income and Expenses Update

So I’ve been experimenting with lots of different spreadsheets in the last few months.  Check them out here and here.  I used my June 2018 income and expenses to tryout a few more. It turns out Microsoft Excel has loads of templates to try. It’s been really neat to see it all visualized in so many ways.

Without further ado, here’s a recap of my income and expenses for Jan to Aug 2018, a little early I know.  I don’t currently intend to publish these monthly namely because my income and expenses don’t fluctuate with any significance month-to-month. But I think it's worth checking in with myself and sharing with those on a similar journey. Be inspired to check-in on your finance from time to time. My goal this year is not so much a focus on how much I am spending. Rather my priority is to reach my savings goal.  Check back in a few days for that update or subscribe below because you don't want to miss it!
Income

For the spring semester, I had a side hustle as an adjunct professor. I dove head first into FIRE.  To put it mildly, I didn't love the side hustle. However for the sake of exiting the workforce as soon as possible, I am  mildly interested in some other way to earn money.



Of note, income is just my net pay. In the figures above, it does not include my 401k contributions. This is worth noting because in calculating my savings rate, I do count my individual 401k contributions as part of my total income since it is money I would otherwise have to put towards expenses.  (Updated 02Oct2018 when I realized I completely neglected the Income section!)
Expenses

I still haven’t decided on a good spreadsheet. This data was extracted from a Google Sheets doc that lists all my expenses over way too many categories for Jan to Aug 2018, but I like it enough for now.

expenses-sep2018-myearlyretirementjourney

 

expenses2-sep2018-myearlyretirementjourney

Notes on expenses.
The first sheet includes the amount I put towards savings each month, most of which is automated so I just count it as an expense. The jump in June was not due to an increase in income, but rather aggregated savings that I had no immediate plans for which was transferred to my investment accounts. Savings is targeted for around $3,100 each month. Check out my working budget page for more information.

The second sheet is monthly expenses thus far. To best trend any particular data point, start from the bottom and move up.  My intention is to trend around $2,500/mon or less.  So far I've been over every month except for June. In fact, my target spending for this year is $30,000 of which I'm already at $23,458, and at month eight, I would want to be around $20,000. So I'm over about $3500.

Of note, May was a high expenditure month due to helping out a sick family member.  June was unusually low due to a break I got on my rent.  August was another high expense month because I bought a mattress (classified under "home"), signed up for a fitness class, went on a self-proclaimed writer's retreat which consisted of a weekend stay in a hotel close by (classified under "travel"). I have also been covering Aunty MERJ's rent for the last three months (classified under "dependents/fam").  Transportation was higher in July because I had to pay my six-month premium for car insurance. Medical and health expenses finally came back down after my surgery earlier this year. I'm still healing from that which has required monthly follow-ups at a $40 copay each visit.  Technology in August was for purchasing a hosting plan for my blog. I had been on Blogger prior to this.

For those of you new to personal finance, I would encourage you to start somewhere with keeping track of your finances, e.g. apps, spreadsheets, envelopes. Visuals really help to trend where exactly your money is going. It's easy to round numbers off in your head and think everything is on track. I will admit I don't particularly enjoy putting the reports together but in the end the updates are worth it because it benefits me to have a physical and mental image of my finances and how they are trending. Overall, it's very beneficial and worth the effort. I would strongly encourage you to start tracking your finances no matter where you are in your personal finance journey.
Savings Rate

A firm tenet in FIRE is recognizing and increasing your savings rate.  Tracking income minus expenses, here is what the data reveals.



Closing thoughts.
I am pretty pleased with my financial progress thus far. I'm a little early for quarter three but I have other things coming up in September and I wanted to get this update out of the way for that. This is my first year of My Early Retirement Journey and the financial focus is simply creating awareness and having some sort of framework or plan for what to do with my money. So far, I believe I’m on the right track! Additionally, it really helps to visualize it all! Thanks to Four Pillar Freedom for the great visualization ideas.  Thanks for stopping by!

How are you trending along your journey? Follow/ Like/ Subscribe

 

Single Girl Life | My Week Ending Sep 14, 2018: Paid Time Off!

Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey. In case you're just joining us, here's a little bit about me.  I am a single 30-something, openly Christian, hesitantly immigrant-y, human woman. I enjoy watching TV while eating takeout, and I want to retire early. I currently work as a consultant in a tele-health call center making around $40/hr. I started my professional life in 2015 at the ripe ole age of 31 after a few false starts. I spent 2016 paying off about $10,000 worth of credit card debt. I spent 2017 paying off about $20,000 in private student loans; I still have about $300,000 in federal student loans for which I am currently on an income-based repayment plan for the next 25 years, give or take.  I started really getting into savings and investing late 2017 when I stumbled upon the FIRE (financial independence, retire early) community.  In 2018, I made the decision to try to save for a sabbatical and maybe if all goes well continue the journey to early retirement.  Along this journey, I give weekly more personal than finance updates just like this one. Come along with me, I urge you!
My Week

So this week I won't do my normal structure of separating the days. Why, you ask? Well, frankly all the days were the same. I didn't have to work this week, so that was a huge win for the single girl! I'm finally on to this holiday thing so I scheduled paid time off every three months this year: March, June, Sep, Dec. You get it.

I haven't quite mastered the let's go somewhere part of a holiday, but I'm okay with it. This week was another staycation. Since I started this job in 2015, I haven't been anywhere on my paid time off. I'm a fan of the staycation mostly because it requires the least amount of planning and money.  It just hurts too much to spend money on something that won't bring me the same amount of joy. For example, the easy-to-plan vacations that are a couple clicks away on Groupon Getaways seem to hover around $2,000 for about a week of excitement. It would take me a month to save that much money. Thus, I would expect the vacation to make me happy for at least a month. Usually after the vacation is over, the happiness is over because I still have to go back to work. As a result, the staycation meets my current needs.

The staycations are not completely free however, I think this one cost me $200 for prepared food I ordered through the mail; $40 for cable; $50 for snacks and luxury grocery items (e.g. cut fruit, fancy chocolates); grand total = $290.  At an average of 50% savings rate, that would take me about two days to save. And I'm happy for 7 days, so it's a win. Outside of that, this is in my budget, so there's not really any additional savings required. But I was trying to make a point.

So what exactly did I do? Eat my yummy food. Side note, the food I bought actually provides about four to six additional weeks of dinners, but I wanted variety so I got a few different things. Watch TV. I watched: 90 Day Fiancé, 911, The Resident, Younger, Alone Together, copious amounts of House Hunters/ International, Wives with Knives, Who the bleep did I marry?, Disney's Weddings, Bachelor in Paradise. It was fun to mix the dating shows with the true crime shows to remind myself what happens after the honeymoon. Bahahahahah.
Not so fun

Things I did that weren't so fun. I spent two hours a day, at least, Facebook stalking old friends and old crushes from my past through my blog's profile. (I don't have a personal FB profile specifically for this reason.) Then I would get sad wondering why they weren't thinking about me. Then I would shut my laptop and swear not to go back on Facebook again only to turn around and do it again the next day. I also tried to stay off blogging activities. That worked, sort of. I didn't create any posts during the actual work week and Brain only came up with one fluffy post idea from my TV shows, namely 90 Day FiancĂ©. It's amazing what some men do for a beautiful woman, and it's equally amazing how creative some women are when they craft a relationship from nothing! Guilty. I held strong feelings for a boy for ten years because he said hi to me once. But I was in my teens; these women are adults.  The best counter for these irrational feelings are true crime stories on Investigation Discovery. That sobers me up quickly.

Well for the rest of you toiling away for the man this week... what did I miss?

TV this week: All the things.
Takeout this week: See above.

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Blog Update | Sep 2018: 6 Months, 0 Dollars, 6,000 Pageviews

Here you are. Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey. It's that time again. Time for my next blog update. I think I will probably just do 1 or 2 more of these until I really decide to aggressively monetize my blog. Otherwise, I'm not sure what purpose they serve as I didn't necessarily start my blog to garner pageviews and earn income. As of now, I should be able to FIRE or seek a sabbatical without relying on side income.  Well let's get into it!

Related content:

To recap, I published my first post 20Feb2018 on Blogger. Since then I have been to Bluehost and back…twice. Then I went back to Blogger with my personal domain purchased from Bluehost. After 100 posts, I decided to commemorate my progress by going back to self-hosting. This time I tried Siteground. Both Siteground and Bluehost are now my affiliates, so please feel free to click through one of my links if you are interested in starting a blog. The starting part is easy, but more than that it's pretty fun.

Related content: 

Overall, I have to say I still really enjoy blogging. This hasn't changed. I like writing and I like creating content. Even though it’s annoying, I even like searching different ways to attract more traffic to my blog.  Less so after the summer I just spent trying different things to drive traffic to my blog. It's not time wasted because I wanted to know I at least tried. I still write and create content because my original reason for starting this blog was to create a space for single girls like me to be a part of the conversation. Enough chatting, let’s get down to the details for which you came.
To Refresh Your Memory: Month 3 Blog Update (posted 05Jun2018)

Expenses (to date):
$14.99 (est) to keep my domain after leaving BlueHost

Blog Traffic (via Blogger) 
date range: 20Feb2018 to 28May2018
Pageviews (all time): 4,853 (**Blogger which counts my pageviews, far less without that)
Subscribers (total): 3 (up from 0)
Revenue (all time): $0.82 (via Google Adsense)

Posts published (total):  41
Posts scheduled (upcoming): 17

Month 6 Blog Traffic and Income Report


Accurate as of 28Aug2018.

Expenses (to date):

$14.99 + $143 = $158

Note: Bluehost Domain + 3-year hosting plan from Siteground

Blog Traffic (via Google Analytics)

date range: 20Feb2018 to 27Aug2018

Pageviews (all time, via Analytics)): 6,104 (up from 1,601)
Subscribers (total, via feedburner):  8 (up from 3)
Revenue (all time, via Adsense): $2.18 (up from $0.82)

Posts published (total): 118
Posts scheduled (upcoming): 9

Screenshot from Google Analytics



Notes.

Top 5 Posts

  1. Why Yes, This Is My $300,000 Student Loan Repayment Plan: REPAYE 2018

  2. How Being A Victim of Identity Theft Helped Me Take Control of My Finances and Pay Off $30,000 of Debt in 2 Years

  3. Review | 3 Free Spreadsheets You Might Want To Try

  4. Why I Love My Roku So Much! (Cable-whathat?)

  5. A Bajillion Tiny Little Indisputable Facts About Life In Your 30s


Posting Schedule:
I generally post at least twice a week. My default goal is 1x/mon like the first personal finance blog I ever read. This will likely be accomplished once I have said everything I needed to say, but for now since blogging is so new, I still have so much left to say! Most prolific month was August 2018 with a whopping 30 posts and counting; Jul 2018 = 23 posts; June 2018 = 22 posts. August was meant to be a little sparse but I had some old posts I had written since April sitting in the queue.  When I started to see the blog taking a different direction, I wanted to get those old posts published before I started heading down that new direction. I am gaining a little bit of focus as I frame my posts around my life as a single girl. I am literally the only one I know in this season of life.

I also started a Wednesday weekly post that I post every Wednesday. I give real time life updates every Saturday. For pre-planned posts, I tend to schedule them Tuesdays and Thursday to space them out. I've published a couple comics after being inspired by another female blogger's comic site. Those were really fun!

Social Media Engagement
Joined Twitter 20May2018:  95 Followers (up from 20 Followers)
Joined Facebook 19May2018: 15 Followers (up from 1 Follower on My Early Retirement Journey Page)
Joined Pinterest  08Apr2018: 10.3k monthly viewers; 289 Monthly Engaged; 63 Followers (up from 207 monthly viewers; 6 Monthly Engaged; 25 Followers)
Joined Bloglovin 22Jun2018: 12 followers (new)

I still use IFTT to automate my posts to Pinterest boards, less so now that WordPress will automatically publish posts to Facebook and Twitter.  I had a soft goal of tackling social media as a summer project and I gave it the good single girl try - a little half-hearted, a little purposeful. As suspected, driving traffic from social media requires a lot more engagement than I'm willing to do at this point, especially in regards to Pinterest.  I try to only check social media like FB and Twitter once a month.  For Pinterest I tried a couple things - IFTT automation, the free Tailwind trial (100 pins), creating 40 boards from 10 up from the first 4 I had. I joined two or three group boards.  My Pinterest interest has swiftly taken a back seat. I still intend to pin with IFTT automation and am including 1 pin a week on my blog-chore chart for Fall 2018. We shall see.

Traffic Generating Ideas, thus far

  • Pinterest, Pinterest automation, Tailwind - no real marked success

  • Guest posting - success

  • Posting often (more than 1x/wk) - success

  • Rockstar Finance Directory and Forums - success

  • Linky parties/ Co-Hosting Linky Parties - got a few social media followers


Previously (from Month 3 update)


  1. In April 2018 I was pretty active on RockStar Forums. I subscribed to their directory as well.  This summer I may get more active. The newness died down and so did my interest. - SUCCESS

  2. I requested addition to the Women of FIRE Directory. - SUCCESS

  3. I requested addition to Women Who Money Directory (sorry can’t locate link). - SUCCESS

  4. Commenting on other blogs (typically: Making Sense of Cents, Millennial – Revolution, Frugalwoods) - SUCCESS


More thoughts on things I tried that worked (or didn't)


  • Guest posting

    • Scotch Street = 3 views via referral according to Google Analytics

    • Chief Mom Officer = 30 views via referral according to Google Analytics

    • The Financial Diet  = 300 views, although it's not listed as direct referral traffic, my pageviews went up the day after my post was published on their site

    • *Love for Thirty Project = no identifiable referral traffic, but moderate spike in traffic shortly after appearing on their site (about 90 pageviews), unknown if related.



  • Thoughts: Submitting on The Financial Diet was the easiest and got me the most pageviews, so I will focus my attention on selecting and or writing at least 1 post a month that would be a good fit for that site. I think it's a good match because a) they have some of my target demographic and b) they write things I enjoy reading.  Also, it was easy because I didn't have to write new content for submission.




  • I didn't notice this in my last update or if I did I don't remember, but I get a decent amount of traffic from Rockstar Finance Directory, according to Analytics and even a little bit from Rockstar Finance forums.  Per Jetpack, the Directory generates my best referral traffic to date since being back on Wordpress, followed by Tread Lightly, Retire Early, and a couple sprinkles from Women Who Money. Jetpack is a lot easier for a technophobe like me to glean data.

  • For some reason, being back on self-hosting/ WordPress has increased my visibility and pageviews are trending upwards.

  • Fails: Sent a quick line of interest to Business Insider for their Real Money series with no response.


Changes you might have noticed


  • Switched to new platform.

  • Changed blog design and focus.

  • Added affiliates with Bluehost and Siteground (in addition to Walmart). Won't inundate you with more links. I know...missed opportunity. But I figure you're tired by now.


Personal Markers of Success


  • I shall consider my blog a success when I can get twelve actively engaged readers. Why 12? Well, the way I see it if twelve was enough for Jesus' tribe, twelve is good enough for this single girl! By actively engaged I mean not just other bloggers sharing their website link, but twelve people actively checking in on each other and doing life together, albeit virtually. Maybe I'll get there by the end of this year, or at my one year mark around March 2019. Maybe a few more years after that.

  • I shall feel like I met my objective if at some point in the future someone I know in real life forwards me some content I created. That to me will mean not only did my content reach its target audience (single girls like me) but that my toil and labor was worth it.


Next Steps


  • Continue to post regularly, default goal: 1x/mon

  • Continue to try different things until I can get in a groove to find that 20% effort that generates 80% of outcomes (whatever that maybe)

  • Submit monthly (maybe) to The Financial Diet

  • Set-up IFTT to pin to 3 more priority Pinterest boards

  • Have 3 to 5 products in the Single Girl Gift Shop by Halloween 2018

  • Thinking of adding a Sunday weekly post on church notes


 

Your turn...how has blogging been going for you? Any tips, stumbles, or triumphs?

Wednesday Weekly: September 12, 2018

Most popular post on My Early Retirement Journey this week: Sabbatical 2020: In Which I Take Back My Life

Wednesday Weekly is a round up of what I stumbled upon this week on the world wide web because sharing resources and information is what the internet is all about.

WHAT I STUMBLED UPON THIS WEEK

How Can We Make Technology Healthier for Humans? (Wired)


Why the world should adopt a basic income (The Economist)


WOMEN ON THE WEB

8 Dark Truths About Human Psychology To Explode Your Blogging Income (Ruth Makes Money)


THIS BLOGGING BUSINESS

How to schedule your pins on Pinterest for FREE (Ivory Mix)


Enjoy? Follow/ Like/ Subscribe



 

100 Posts Later. What You Liked. What I Learned.

Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey! All three of my loyal readers, I'm so glad you're here! I have reached 100 posts (actually a week or so ago). Praise the Lord! Yeah, I took it there.  Anyway, for the two that I didn't just offend, keep reading for a recap of the 10 most viewed posts and a few lessons learned along the way. Stay tuned for my next blog update publishing soon. (In case you missed the last one, check it out here!)

Let's get into it. Per Google Analytics...
Here are my Top 10 posts:

Maybe you read some. But in case you missed any, here they are for your browsing pleasure...

  1. Why Yes, This Is My $300,000 Student Loan Repayment Plan: REPAYE 2018

  2. How Being A Victim of Identity Theft Helped Me Take Control of My Finances and Pay Off $30,000 of Debt in 2 Years

  3. Review | 3 Free Spreadsheets You Might Want To Try

  4. Why I Love My Roku So Much! (Cable-whathat?)

  5. A Bajillion Tiny Little Indisputable Facts About Life In Your 30s

  6. 7 Easy Meals When You Need A Break: A Listicle

  7. What No One Tells You About Managing Your Aging Parents' Finances

  8. Enron and Madoff and Ponzi! Oh My!: How to Background Check Your Financial Professional

  9. Financial Update | June 2018 Income and Expenses

  10. My Week Ending May 18, 2018: Royal Wedding, Sick Again, Misery


Notes. The top ten are certainly a surprise. I see no ostensible pattern.  Do you?

  • The top two don't surprise me much. That seems to be the reason a lot of people start a personal finance blog.

  • Three of ten have some sort of personal finance number in the actual title.

  • Four of ten have some variation of the word finance.

  • The Roku post is certainly a surprise.

  • A couple of my more personal stories made it on the list, so that's at least hopeful because I enjoy writing those a bit more.


Lessons learned:


  • Do not be consumed by readership, comments, and page views. It will kill your joy.

  • It's pretty easy to start a blog. It's pretty hard to get anyone to read it.

  • It's exciting to see your words in print no matter which way you look at it. While new comments are pretty motivating, write for you. Write what you wish was already written for you to read.

  • It's pretty easy to be seduced by the success of others. It can be pretty uneasy getting over the low of not quite realizing that level of success just yet.

  • Join the community of your blog's niche. It's a great way to make connections, get tips, and get help!


What I learned about myself:


  • I still enjoy creating content, writing, publishing etc.

  • I am still looking for new ways to establish myself online while staying true to my voice. This means there are still some things I censor until I see a more established blogger doing it first.

  • I am still trying a variety of things to figure out what works. This means I'm still browsing at least five or so blogs a week and commenting and sometimes digging deeper into their archives to see what I can take away from their success journey.

  • I am still not aggressively pursuing making my blog profitable. By this I mean not writing content that is clickable or shareable or marketable or affiliate-linkable. For now, I'm still writing content I want to write that documents my early retirement journey from the perspective of a single girl. That was my objective after all. I'll talk more about blog strategies and changes in my next blog update. Subscribe now so you don't miss it! :)

  • Lastly, blogging is easily my cheapest hobby. Prior to this my favorite two things to do were eat takeout and watch TV. They still are, but TV costs me $80/mon with a cable subscription. Takeout can run me around $200/mon. Blogging is $4/mon or if you click through my link $3/mon. That's about 10 cents a day. 10 cents! Even when I play the lottery with my office pool, it's $2/week. Blogging is the best. It really is, and not just because of the affiliate link I'm promoting. I was obviously blogging way before I was an affiliate! I strongly encourage you to start your own blog. Even if you only publish six posts - that's six pieces of your life you're sharing with the world!



 

 

Single Girl Life | How I Survived: Unreal, Faroe Islands, Party Food (Sep 7, 2018)

Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey. In case you're just joining us, here's a little bit about me.  I am a single 30-something, openly Christian, hesitantly immigrant-y, human woman. I enjoy watching TV while eating takeout, and I want to retire early. I currently work as a consultant in a tele-health call center making around $40/hr. I started my professional life in 2015 at the ripe ole age of 31 after a few false starts. I spent 2016 paying off about $10,000 worth of credit card debt. I spent 2017 paying off about $20,000 in private student loans; I still have about $300,000 in federal student loans for which I am currently on an income-based repayment plan for the next 25 years, give or take.  I started really getting into savings and investing late 2017 when I stumbled upon the FIRE (financial independence, retire early) community.  In 2018, I made the decision to try to save for a sabbatical and maybe if all goes well continue the journey to early retirement.  Along this journey, I give weekly more personal than finance updates just like this one of single girl life. Come along with me, I urge you!

Monday – Labor Day. Stayed in bed all weekend. Ate lots of chocolates. Ever try the Unreal brand of chocolates. Yummy, vegan (dairy-free for me), and pricey!

Tuesday – Was hoping this week would go by fast. It didn’t really. Oh well. Got shipment of party food but it was spoiled. Luckily, company is re-sending new shipment without giving me any grief whatsoever. Still bummed I missed the DirecTV deals. I was planning to spend all of September vegging out. It’s my half-birthday month so I like to spoil myself with my favorite things – tv and takeout and chocolates of course.

Wednesday – Learned last night there was an entire nation called the Faroe Islands. Did you know that? Thanks House Hunters International – I like to call it research on where to live next. Wide sweeping lush landscapes and sea air. Two to 3 bedroom apartments for $800 to 1200/mon.  Hmmm, definitely seems like a chill retirement spot. Too rich for my meager budget, but probably ideal for someone out there.

Thursday – Where has the week gone? Went to Tai Chi class last night.  A lot more talking and interaction than I would prefer but at least it’s as low impact as I anticipated. It smells funny. So ready for this week to be done. Food I ordered for my week off hasn’t been re-shipped yet. Shucks! Eating was going to be the highlight of my week. Can’t be too mad, half anticipated this with this business owner. Small business just can’t compete with the convenience and regularity of big business.

Since starting my blog, I am more disgruntled with my job than I have been in the past. The problem with sharing your life with the world or even with another person is that second set of eyes. Your problems get magnified even if only by you. You are now acutely aware of the disillusions and cracks in your life.

You see this all the time with reality-tv relationships. Any hope of repairing damaged relationships is lost when you have 1 million people weighing in and the burden of your introspection is magnified as you now see yourself through the lens of a thousand eyes.   I don’t like my job any more or less than I did before I was blogging, but now that I’ve made an outcry of my dissatisfaction I feel this call of action…out of nowhere. I don’t like that.

Friday – Yay, my party food arrived this morning! And the exterminator is coming while I’m at work. Wins for the single girl. Just got to get through this day with no one yelling at me. I’ve scoured the internet for DirecTV deals, but alas nothing. I think I’ll just do the 7-day free trial for my week off. Nothing like scrolling through channels from the comfort of my big girl bed.  Finally in the initial stages of getting a more regular schedule, i.e. I’ve written out a schedule. Tried it last night but I was tired and out of it.  I know I’m more apt to create in the morning, but I actually want to save my energy for work since I need my work-income to fund my life. Made $10 on Adsense! It was a surprise because I only logged in to see how to make the ads smaller; couldn’t figure it out because what I thought was there to resize the ads wasn’t there anymore. Then the $10 distracted me and twenty minutes went by and I had to get ready for work. Enjoy your weekend! I know I will.

TV this week: Bachelor in Paradise, Cybil, Love Island (UK), The Resident, House Hunters/ International
Takeout this week: Taco Bell ($3), Peruvian ($10)

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Related Content:

Spotlight on: Millennial Revolution

I can't get enough of their Reader Cases! Please check out their site. It's brash and straight to the point. They are unapologetic and have a bit of a Cinderella story. Who doesn't like that?!

Remember the 'old days' when online chat was still a thing and people would list and ask for stats upon entering a chatroom.
I thought that might be a quaint idea to utilize as I browsed and shared other FIRE blogs of interest. As this blog grows, there might be other blogs that might apply to your situation or season or just might be more interesting.
I like sharing knowledge; it's kind of what the Internet's all about. Some of the details are things bloggers have strong opinions on and use it to differentiate their experience. Others are things that are fun or basic to know about other bloggers.

Blog name: Millennial Revolution
Author: Kristy Shen (FIREcracker) and Bryce Leung (Wanderer)
Blog start date: 2016
Location: call Toronto home, but travel full-time
Current Age: 35 and 36
Age of FI/RE: 31 and 32
Net worth: $1,000,000 and counting
Debt: $0
Income/ Income streams: investment income, blog income, book deal
Savings: $1,00,000 and counting
Filing status: Married
Rent/own: rent
Kids: 0
Pets: 0
Car: no
Cell phone: yes
Cable: no
Credit cards: yes, for travel hacking
Motivation: Because they could? They were pretty high earners and graduated college with little if any debt.
Their Journey so far: FIREd at 31
Blog Notables: I particularly am a big fan of the reader case studies. There is a lot of flack in the comments section of these posts but FIRECracker doesn't seem to pay it any mind. Her husband does an investment series worth checking out for those new to investing.  I can certainly appreciate their no nonsense style to their blog. It has a particular sense of...it's my blog..I do what I want!
My takeaway:  You don't have to own a home as part of your investment portfolio. They are big proponents of rent vs own and encourage others to really assess if it makes sense in their Journey to Early Retirement because it's not a requirement nor a necessary part of the dream for everyone.
How I relate to their journey: FIRECracker has several posts on her meager beginnings in Communist China and how being poor helped shaped the choices that have afforded her the lifestyle she does. I too grew up in humble but happy conditions as a new immigrant where hardwork was a lifestyle not a choice.
What blogbytes would you like to know about your favorite FIRE blogger?

Wednesday Weekly: September 5, 2018

Most popular post on My Early Retirement Journey this week: My Alternatives to Returning to Work After Sabbatical


Wednesday Weekly is a round up of what I stumbled upon this week on the world wide web because sharing resources and information is what the internet is all about.

WHAT I STUMBLED UPON THIS WEEK

Is there a difference between capital gains and dividend income? (Investopedia)

Five Features of Better Arguments (The Atlantic)


How My Smartphone Revived the Purity of Reading (Wired)


WOMEN ON THE WEB

Americans Are Having Fewer Babies. They Told Us Why. (The New York Times)


THIS BLOGGING BUSINESS

How to Write a Blog Post People Actually Want to Read (The Write Life)

Enjoy? Follow/ Like/ Subscribe



 

Sabbatical 2020: In Which I Take Back My Life

Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey. I have a lot on my mind at the moment, and this post has been brewing for a while. The initial draft was started earlier in the summer, but the idea of taking time off from work is documented in my personal journal as early as March 2017 (1.5 years after I started working). I bet it was even earlier but I keep paper journals as well and those are not as searchable. I am just beating around the bush because although I have been thinking about leaving the workforce for a long time, announcing it publicly even to a small forum of readers makes it seem indelible somehow even though I am only really accountable to myself. My thoughts are scattered both figuratively and literally all over the place.  To try to organize them in a meaningful way, I am going back to elementary school expository writing structure. In this post, I shall identify the who, what, when, where, why, how of my decision to take a sabbatical in the year 2020. I reserve the right to update and change this post over time.

Who?


Me, this single-on-purpose girl, and me alone (oh, and my bff God, of course). I recently posited for the first time in public whether I wanted to take a sabbatical in five years or FIRE for good in ten years. Given the recent series of events to include the mild but regular downward shift in my personal health and wellness and the added responsibility of managing the affairs of an elderly parent, a sabbatical seems imperative... sometimes.  I want to include my hesitation here because on some days I am strongly convinced a sabbatical is the next best move, and other days I think I can just stick it out like everyone else. The latter occurs when my back and shoulder do not hurt as much; or it is the weekend; or I have not spoken to Aunty MERJ in a couple of days. I feel selfish even typing this, but I just want to get away. This desire to escape from the stagnancy that is my current life is not a new or temporary feeling; the recent events I described are not a nidus but more an impetus of this desire.

Read more: Sunday Funnies | The Life Cycle of a Corporate Drone

What?


The whole reason I started this blog was to document my journey out of the workforce and into financial independence. I am simply redefining the parameters at this point. So, while I shall certainly not be financially independent by 2020, my plan (God-willing) is to save enough money to be financially-able for a while. Five years to be exact.

Until this moment, I was vacillating between leaving the workforce (on my own terms) in two years and sticking it out a little longer to properly reach financial independence and retire early. But I am about 51% sure now. So here is my declaration of intent. I intend to leave the workforce on my own terms: Labor Day 2020, Monday, Sep 7, 2020.  That will be five years from when I first started working at my current job in my chosen profession in medical communications for a pharmaceutical company.

I knew this was the job I wanted when I was still in professional school (or graduate school to some), and I was so happy when I finally got it, thanks to a fellow classmate who referred me. The work itself was exactly what I thought it would be - structured and rote. Just as I thought I wanted my life to be. I was wrong. It turns out I would rather be inspired by my surroundings. I am not growing as a person or professionally.

The workplace dynamics while not unexpected is not completely ideal. I do not really like any of the people I work with, but I do not suppose that is all that unusual. In general, my motto is I do not go to work to make friends, I go to work to make money. I am not one of those people who is proud to say I have been working since age 12 or age 16 or the like, nor am I one of those people who believes if you love what you do, it won't feel like work.  If that were true, it would just be called love. There would not be a separate word for it.

You can call it frame of mind or work ethic. You can call it whatever you want; I do not have it.  These different facets of the workforce may have played a role somewhat in where I am now, but my health has played the biggest role. I have never been sick so many days in any time frame or paid so much for healthcare. Given the last nine to twelve months of my health history, I do not seem to be getting better health wise. It is perfectly acceptable for parents to take time away from the workforce to nurture their family. Similarly, I am taking time off to nurture myself.

Physically, I have carpal tunnel in my right wrist aggravated by eight hours a day of computer work; poor gut health; persistent mild to moderate neck, shoulder, back, leg, tailbone, leg, side pain. Additionally, my incision wound from my surgery in March 2018 still has not healed. It weeps like my soul. My mental health seems to be on the decline as well. I have intermittent trouble focusing and recalling event details.  I used to be really smart and clever and sharp. Those seem like different words to mean the same thing, but not to me.

On the wellness front, I would love to be part of a community again, do good works, and be part of a church. I want to work on my spiritual growth and seek joy.

Overall, what I hope to accomplish with this sabbatical is to heal within and without.

When?


Start:  Labor Day 2020, Monday, September 7, 2020


End: 2025 (tentative)

Where?


I do not know yet where I shall go. I currently live in North Carolina, and I think a proper fresh start would involve a big move. However my primary focus will be a place that is in my budget. Logistically, it would be easier to stay in the United States.  Some affordable cities I have looked into include Lillington NC, Missoula MT, and Bloomington IN. Adventure is certainly built into trying out a brand new identity in a brand new country. Some affordable countries I have looked into include Chiang Mai Thailand, La Algarve region Portugal, Croatia, and Spain.   The first roadblock for me with international destinations is obtaining a visa to stay longer than three months. Travel and adventure is not my priority so moving to a new place every few months would detract from my goal of finding calm and peace and a simpler life. Overall, my focus for a destination is one that is in my price range that will allow me to accomplish my sabbatical objective.

Read more: Using Scenes From My Childhood To Figure Out Where To Live Next

Why?


As I mentioned, I want to nurture myself back to whole again. I am achy all the time. I sleep but I am not well rested. It could be something as simple as my mattress. Or it could be mental stress manifesting as physical pain.  It could be sitting in the same position eight hours a day.  It could be my lack of social interaction. I do not know, but I am starting with eliminating my job. Even as I write this, it is not as cathartic as I thought it would be. I am mostly just scared now. What if leaving my job fixes nothing. I shared some of these same thoughts in my guest post on another blog.

...The wrench in the situation is I still do not know what exactly to do once I retire. In fact, once early retirement became a possibility, I found myself retreating a bit. I had  gotten used to this idea that I would have to work for the rest of my life. It was my security blanket of sorts. I had gotten comfortable in my mediocrity and my pursuit of nothing. I got comfortable having work be a time-suck and energy-drain.  Because if work was sucking all the life out of me, no one could blame me for holing up in my house every night and weekend, right?

...I mean who says just because I have time to do it that I am suddenly going to start eating more vegetables; exercising more; flossing twice a day; communing with nature on nature walks; be a service to my community; end world hunger;  bring about world peace; find a church family; find my purpose; or experience life altering, past hurt-erasing joy?
Perhaps the question is not whether to FIRE in five years or ten years, but rather what if I do all this, and it does not work?  What if after two or five or ten years, I am still just as aimless and discontented as I am now?  I shall be out of options, then what? ~ My Early Retirement Journey on Scotch Street

I shall say this though - having this milestone makes the noise more bearable. On the other hand, maybe I am just getting pulled into a different kind of noise.  Honestly, I do not know if this is the right decision, but it is a decision. And it is something to which I can look forward. Even if I fail, my life now is not that bad.

How?


So how exactly will I be able to swing this financially. More than one person has pointed out that even my initial plan to FIRE is flawed because of my massive student debt. But my financial independence plan never included student loan debt elimination. So maybe that means I do not match that definition of financially independent. I am okay with it.

Here is what I have so far in my financial plan to pursue a sabbatical in 2020.  Check out my Budget Struggles page for notes on this and other calculations along this journey.

The best thing I have taken away from the FIRE community is not just great tips and support on savings and investing but learning to get comfortable with the numbers. I may have doubts about what I may actually achieve during my sabbatical, but as for funding it - either I shall have the money to do it or I shall not. That need not be one of the unknowns.

Sabbatical 2020 Budget: $1,500/mon  ($18,000/yr)

Duration of time: 5 years

Total needed: $90,000

But, and this is a big but, I need to save and have this money in my bank account and my brokerage account. I do not plan on taking money out of my 401k to fund this sabbatical, nor do I plan on stopping contributions to my 401k. I may do a Roth conversion ladder after the fact, but that is down the line.

Sept 2018 check-in. (accurate as of 30Aug2018)

Savings (currently earmarked as my Safety Net Fund): $22,628

Brokerage Account:  $33,378

Total: $56,006

Difference (left to save): $90,000 - 56,000 = $34,000

Left to save: $34,000

By my calculations, I should be able to save this much in my savings and brokerage account by Sept 2020.  My annual savings target is not going to change much from where it is now, I am just going to access it sooner.

As the time gets closer, the plan would be to max out my 401k and Roth IRA early in 2020 and funnel the rest to my savings (as opposed to brokerage account) so it is easier to access when I pull the trigger.

FAQs


Maybe all you need is another job?

Maybe not.

What if you lose your job before then?

I shall continue along the plan to raise my goal amount and sabbatical when I reach that amount.

What if you get to your goal amount before Labor Day 2020?

I don't see how that could happen.

What if you fall in love and get married or pregos?

Don't make me laugh.

What if your health declines further and you need routine doctor's visits?

For this I have no answer. I would probably have to keep working to get health insurance. Alternatively, I would need to figure out how much health insurance would cost on the marketplace and sum that figure into my Sabbatical Budget. Furthermore, I am in the process of taking preliminary steps to at least maintain or better my current health. Check out my back to school life list for more info.
Updates:

TBD

Read more: My Alternatives to Returning to Work After Sabbatical

Single Girl Life | Aug 31, 2018: Insider Secrets, Customer Disservice, Miralax

Welcome back to My Early Retirement Journey. In case you're just joining us, here's a little bit about me.  I am a single 30-something, openly Christian, hesitantly immigrant-y, human woman. I enjoy watching TV while eating takeout, and I want to retire early. I currently work as a consultant in a tele-health call center making around $40/hr. I started my professional life in 2015 at the ripe ole age of 31 after a few false starts. I spent 2016 paying off about $10,000 worth of credit card debt. I spent 2017 paying off about $20,000 in private student loans; I still have about $300,000 in federal student loans for which I am currently on an income-based repayment plan for the next 25 years, give or take.  I started really getting into savings and investing late 2017 when I stumbled upon the FIRE (financial independence, retire early) community.  In 2018, I made the decision to try to save for a sabbatical and maybe if all goes well continue the journey to early retirement.  Along this journey, I give weekly more personal than finance updates just like this one. Come along with me, I urge you!

Monday – So I survived the weekend with Aunty MERJ. I’m so so so so glad I cancelled that Hawaii trip. It actually wasn’t that bad, but I got home really late Sunday, ate and went to sleep. I didn’t feel like I had a weekend to relax before heading back to work. Oh well, have a week of PTO coming up in September. Planning all sorts of fun treats. Gotta get some blogging tasks done in the next two weeks…

Tuesday – It is hot like bananas. Yes, the skin melting sunshine is back. Ugh. Last week I drove to work with the windows down and got goose bumps because of the chill in the air. This morning I had to turn the air on, windows up. Trying to streamline blogging tasks for the fall. All I want to do is watch TV now! So many good shows being advertised. Much to my chagrin  DirecTV no longer running their specials and increased their doggone prices but like a sucker I may shell out $40/mon for sub-par service. Shame on me!

Also, some insider secrets about affiliate marketing. They up your commission based on how well-displayed their product is on your site and if you give it your personal recommendation. You can’t trust these darn bloggers (present company included)! Haven’t called Aunty MERJ in two days. I’m just tired of dealing with it. That’s no way to act, but that’s where I’m at now.

Wednesday – Sleeping through the night but not waking up feeling well rested. Have done nothing for Aunty MERJ this week so far. I feel like I’m rebelling. Blogging took over my nights last two nights. Not sure how/why? Signed up for another affiliate – DirecTV. I was looking for some free trials and the affiliate program popped up, so I went for it. Also applied for a business ID number so I can stop using my personal tax ID number. Yikes. Especially since I sign up for these programs, get no sale, and my information is just hanging out there in cyberspace.  I’m just putting things in place for future things to come I suppose.

Job asking me to pinch hit on another team that I previously trained with to cover someone’s maternity leave beginning in December. For once, I didn’t automatically say yes. Right now, I’m at…I’ll do it willingly for $2+ more… $4 would be preferable. But I’m at least willing to stay where I am if no bump in pay. It would be more responsibility but fewer people yelling at me potentially. Overall, less busy as far as call volume. I have mixed feelings, primarily because they didn’t even offer a bump in pay and too I was settling into a groove with the fall season.

Thursday – It just flew by. I don’t know what happened. Had a nasty customer service experience and Wal-Mart. And after I had just told the world how great they are. That meant tossing and turning and replaying the interaction in my mind. If there ever were a girl who sweat the small stuff… it’s this girl right here!

Friday – Oh, glorious Friday. I did nothing this week. Didn’t check in with Aunty MERJ once. Didn’t do any chores. Was so upset after Wal-Mart interaction last night, couldn’t think to grocery shop. Why am I so rattled by things and people who didn’t matter just yesterday.  Funny thing happened at work. I stumbled upon an old note I wrote to myself in May 2018 that I was definitely going to take a 6 month sabbatical in Oct 2018. I wrote I would not think twice and just pick between Croatia or Spain and go with it. Ha, if 5-month-ago me could see me now. Took some Miralax last night because of recent decline in diet. Haven’t cooked anything in two weeks.  Happy Labor Day weekend!

How did your week go? Share your high and lows… I definitely want to know!

TV this week: Bachelor in Paradise, The Bold Type, Cybil, Love Island
Takeout this week: Taco Bell, Peruvian

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