paflyer
Final Approach
But eating eggs will give you a heart attack, right?And eggs have very little to do with it.
But eating eggs will give you a heart attack, right?And eggs have very little to do with it.
Do you have Diabetes? If you don't that is nothing to joke about!
You'll probably be too old to fly by then.When I can afford an airplane without making lifestyle sacrifices, I will have one.
But eating eggs will give you a heat attack, right?
You'll probably be too old to fly by then.
But but but, the FDA! and the AMA? And the "AdCouncil"? And Big Pharma?Your dad having a heart attack gives you a heart attack.
And diabetes.
Smoking too.
And inflamed plaques inside of your coronary arteries give you heart attacks. Sometimes they even contain cholesterol, just like eggs.
But I want my steak, sales pitch for eggs be damned.
Hopefully you're in a career rocketship.Doubtful.
When I can afford an airplane without making lifestyle sacrifices, I will have one.
It's not about cost, it's about my pleasureI was really trying to say that there are cheaper ways to get protein other than steak. Please don't take that as a condemnation of beef in any way. In fact, I'll introduce you to Hank and Ginger. They're registered black angus and will be quite delicious. We're going to do a few Wagyu feeders in the spring that will be ready for the dinner table in late 2020.
View attachment 54762
P.s. they're steers, but the kids got to do the naming. I was angling for calling them Tomahawk and Ribeye but lost the battle.
But eating eggs will give you a heart attack, right?
But... consensus !/Eggman admits his bias/
In my opinion Ancel Keyes did more harm to the American diet and heart health than anything else in history and in time will be a textbook case of 'science' getting it very wrong.
Hopefully you're in a career rocketship.
But having a plane can be part of one's lifestyle just like having a big house, boat, motorcycle, frequent dining out, foreign travel, etc. Any of those lifestyle choices might mean sacrificing others. Just depends on which choice is more important to you.
Sometimes I feel like I'm playing in a rich persons play ground. Here I am after parking my rental and along comes two guys getting out of their Columbia 300. Later I see them get into their Mercedes. A little jealous yes but I remind myself I'm greatful to afford this sport and support my family of 5 while my wife is a stay at home mom. I see partnership in near future and later when my rv is paid for sole ownership. Don't take flying for granted. Not everyone can afford this.
Sometimes I feel like I'm playing in a rich persons play ground. Here I am after parking my rental and along comes two guys getting out of their Columbia 300. Later I see them get into their Mercedes. A little jealous yes but I remind myself I'm greatful to afford this sport and support my family of 5 while my wife is a stay at home mom. I see partnership in near future and later when my rv is paid for sole ownership. Don't take flying for granted. Not everyone can afford this.
Sounds like the 800 hours drives the other activities.Frequent dining out is my sin, and I really like to go on vacation. I've flown 800 hours in the last year, so sacrificing the things I really enjoy( traveling, jug, eating out consistently etc) to do something I already get to do is hard to justify.
Jug? As in moonshine or playing in a band?
5 children @ $230,000 each to raise
Who comes up with these ridiculous numbers?
Who comes up with these ridiculous numbers?
Sounds like the 800 hours drives the other activities.
Got it. I was picturing you playin' with some bluegrass band.
You're a pro pilot so you travel and eat out a lot. And you're a 22 pro pilot so you have no discretionary income. Missing anything?It most certainly does. I'm still not entirely sure what you're getting at. I'd like to get an airplane I could work, but then work would follow me home and I kinda like leaving all of my cares at the hangar with regards to airplanes.
Mark Twain's "Third Level of lies. "
When I was a kid, in the 60's/early 70's, three of us kids were in one bedroom (prob 12x12), we walked to school (1/2 mile in the suburbs), and education was covered by real estate taxes. Mom stayed home until we were in our teens, and then she worked part time to give her something to do.Unless you qualify for some form of public assistance, that number sounds about right. Between the needs for a bigger house, having to pay family health insurance, transportation and edumnication, that's what you end up spending. If you make little enough that your kids are on SCHP and they can get pell grants, you are probably going to spend less.
Currently I have little debt, make fairly decent (not great) money for a 22 year old, and no kids/wife.
House comes first, and then airplane.
Frequent dining out is my sin, and I really like to go on vacation. I've flown 800 hours in the last year, so sacrificing the things I really enjoy( traveling, jug, eating out consistently etc) to do something I already get to do is hard to justify.
/Eggman admits his bias/
In my opinion Ancel Keyes did more harm to the American diet and heart health than anything else in history and in time will be a textbook case of 'science' getting it very wrong.
@paflyer,Mark Twain's "Third Level of lies. "
Designed to promote the reduction of family size. I'll leave "why" as an exercise to the reader, to avoid the Hammer of Ban.
Post War, more nascent Capitalists absolutely encouraged = Baby Boom@paflyer,
Being a child who came of age in the things have changed.the early fifties I can not disagree with you more. Values were different back then and population growth was expected. Things have changed.
When I was a kid, in the 60's/early 70's, three of us kids were in one bedroom (prob 12x12), we walked to school (1/2 mile in the suburbs), and education was covered by real estate taxes. Mom stayed home until we were in our teens, and then she worked part time to give her something to do.
Health insurance costs beyond one child (a "family") are marginal.
You're a pro pilot so you travel and eat out a lot. And you're a 22 pro pilot so you have no discretionary income. Missing anything?
Kill the debt with a vengeance. I mean seriously get ****ed off at it. Enough to make a "lifestyle change".
And keep in mind two things on the house:
- You're in a career that will likely mean you move more often than average.
- Even the average homeowner sells a house every seven years.
That last one means that to ever truly get ahead of the mortgage it must be a 15 year term.
A thirty year mortgage at 4%, if you started payments on it 8/1/2017, you'd pay more in interest than principal until 3/1/2030 (with no money down). The people selling you the mortgage know the seven year average when they sell you this.
People just do not get that this is designed to keep them in debt forever.
I'm hearing stories of 50 year term mortgages now in California?! Insanity.
Who comes up with these ridiculous numbers?