Reddit reviews Wealthing Like Rabbits: An Original and Occasionally Hilarious Introduction to the World of Personal Finance
We found 2 Reddit comments about Wealthing Like Rabbits: An Original and Occasionally Hilarious Introduction to the World of Personal Finance. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
Yeah, a year out of school and just needing a budget is no reason to even think about bankruptcy! You borrowed money for school, so now you pay it back--and yes, that either means you pay a little bit for a loooong time, or more faster.
It's not exactly the same because this is US-centric, but the broad strokes of the /r/personalfinance introductory wiki sound like the right place for you to start in terms of figuring out how to balance expenses, debt, and savings. Step 1, make a complete budget and stop using being "irresponsible at money" as an excuse! You're an adult with a job and it's on you to do some research and learn how to handle your finances. There are a lot of books on the subject that could help sorting out the more technical stuff as well as just figuring out how to get your financial house in order.
Bought a small and affordable house. Started up a TFSA and two RRSPs (one through work, one on my own).
Biggest one though, without sounding like a schill, was reading "Wealthing Like Rabbits," an extremely digestible financial advice book for people in their 20s. Really helped my fiance and I.