nicksaiz65
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2017
- Messages
- 3,737
- Reaction score
- 1,476
- Age
- 27
Kind of in a vulnerable spot right now and need some help with my finances.
I previously had put myself into a really bad financial spot. Running up credit card debt, buying a bunch of stuff that I couldn't afford. I eventually realized how dumb this was, and put together a plan to start working myself out of this situation. On top of being a fulltime software developer, I was working in a restaurant part-time(this generated an extra $6000 post-tax total.) I was able to reduce my credit card debt, get a car for transportation, and build up a decent little emergency fund. I also switched to a new tech job that pays me more. Once I felt comfortable enough, I quit the side gigs to focus on my main tech job.
However, lately, I've been running into back-to-back emergencies. To give a couple examples: I cracked my back tooth and had to get it pulled, the tire on my car popped, the list goes on. I also know that my car will need some repairs in the future. These emergencies have essentially decimated my emergency fund. It's too close for comfort to being empty.
A lot of the margin in my budget is taken up by these frigging loans so it will take a bit to rebuild my emergency fund. However, this is worrying: one or two more of these emergencies, and I won't be able to cover them in cash. I would have to take out a loan to cover them, and because my credit is not great right now(working on improving that) it would be high-interest debt too, which makes it sting even more. I don't want to end up in a vicious cycle where every time an emergency comes up, I have to go into more debt for it.
I'm almost considering going back to moonlighting like I was before: working two restaurant shifts a week would generate an extra ~$600 a month that would go straight in my savings. This really helped me out of a tight spot before. This would help protect me from the inevitable future emergencies that are going to come up.
But, it's possible that these two nights could take away from my demanding tech job a bit. That's not good. (It also makes it slightly more difficult to date...)
So while I'm rebuilding my emergency fund: what should I do about if/when an emergency comes up? Should I accept the moonlighting side job 2 days a week even though it could potentially hurt me in my tech job? It definitely would be better to have 100% of my time going towards the tech job, to make it less overwhelming, but I'm also not a fan of taking on high interest debt. Or, should I just take the loans on the chin when stuff comes up during the rebuilding of my emergency fund, and clean up the debt later, leaving me with 100% of my time?
I'm just not sure tbh, some second opinions on this one would be nice.
I previously had put myself into a really bad financial spot. Running up credit card debt, buying a bunch of stuff that I couldn't afford. I eventually realized how dumb this was, and put together a plan to start working myself out of this situation. On top of being a fulltime software developer, I was working in a restaurant part-time(this generated an extra $6000 post-tax total.) I was able to reduce my credit card debt, get a car for transportation, and build up a decent little emergency fund. I also switched to a new tech job that pays me more. Once I felt comfortable enough, I quit the side gigs to focus on my main tech job.
However, lately, I've been running into back-to-back emergencies. To give a couple examples: I cracked my back tooth and had to get it pulled, the tire on my car popped, the list goes on. I also know that my car will need some repairs in the future. These emergencies have essentially decimated my emergency fund. It's too close for comfort to being empty.
A lot of the margin in my budget is taken up by these frigging loans so it will take a bit to rebuild my emergency fund. However, this is worrying: one or two more of these emergencies, and I won't be able to cover them in cash. I would have to take out a loan to cover them, and because my credit is not great right now(working on improving that) it would be high-interest debt too, which makes it sting even more. I don't want to end up in a vicious cycle where every time an emergency comes up, I have to go into more debt for it.
I'm almost considering going back to moonlighting like I was before: working two restaurant shifts a week would generate an extra ~$600 a month that would go straight in my savings. This really helped me out of a tight spot before. This would help protect me from the inevitable future emergencies that are going to come up.
But, it's possible that these two nights could take away from my demanding tech job a bit. That's not good. (It also makes it slightly more difficult to date...)
So while I'm rebuilding my emergency fund: what should I do about if/when an emergency comes up? Should I accept the moonlighting side job 2 days a week even though it could potentially hurt me in my tech job? It definitely would be better to have 100% of my time going towards the tech job, to make it less overwhelming, but I'm also not a fan of taking on high interest debt. Or, should I just take the loans on the chin when stuff comes up during the rebuilding of my emergency fund, and clean up the debt later, leaving me with 100% of my time?
I'm just not sure tbh, some second opinions on this one would be nice.