I am impressed by how fast Nicole can talk and without repeating anything. Brilliant mind.
@iamjane96288 ай бұрын
She is the only you tuber that I do not put on 1.25 speed!
@emc65118 ай бұрын
Or on 1.5 !!@@iamjane9628
@JodyMay058 ай бұрын
Same!
@victorbaird82208 ай бұрын
2x speed 😊
@ch-ir8ld8 ай бұрын
Yea, She is my girlfriend and I love her. And she loves me back
@elleofaname10588 ай бұрын
In the UK it is called the never-never, and a majority live their whole lives that way, always nibbling at the cost, rather than buy up-front and feeling free. The young (and financially innocent) swear by it and it really irks me that living like that isn't living. Pay for something in total, or save up. I have always used my own version of a budget. It makes sense, as you have pointed out, and I agree with all you have said. As for setting a certain amount towards retirement, well, if you reach your 40's and it still hasn't made you wake up and think...hmmmm, is there hope for you? Nicole, you should provide your knowledge (not for free!) as a teaching aid package (book form, video, or in person) for schools/banks, where they can learn......from an expert :)
@dabprod8 ай бұрын
Exactly right. I've mentioned this in remarks in the past. She has a talent the few others have. Hope she doesn't miss the boat.
@santisanti83868 ай бұрын
You are a parent many people didn't have to teach them the basics. Great video.
@donnabrewer32478 ай бұрын
Nicole,you always hit the nail on the head! You are doing the wrong job you should teach about money
@weirdwolf8888 ай бұрын
Your vids are great for people in their 20’s, but highly depressing for a person in their 50’s… who didn’t have KZbin advice in their twenties 😏
@AccordingtoNicole8 ай бұрын
When you know better, you do better
@cathydiamond65738 ай бұрын
I agree. I'm 72 grew up in foster care and never learned finances.
@gorillahd92478 ай бұрын
First time I have ever watched one of your videos. You earned a subscriber! Well done.
@Goggarin19912 ай бұрын
The only thing i refuse to do frugally, is buying a 10+ years old car, simply because of where i live. Its a 12 min drive from where i live to the nearest grocery store, and the weather in northern europe are terrible during the winther. Otherwise, i live frugally, and have increased my money from 500$ to 15K in 2.5 years while being a homeowner. I'm getting there.
@jorlowsky4698 ай бұрын
Exactly why I’m still single.. I feel as though I may have High Expectations but I just want someone to understand that their decisions have consequences and that money in important but just a tool.
@Kirstin72588 ай бұрын
Brilliant! Thank you Nicole X
@retropwned8 ай бұрын
i listen to nicole while i play quake mods 10/10
@recoveringsoul7557 ай бұрын
The MOST important financial decision you ever make is your choice of life partner. Every homeless woman i have spoken to ended up like that because of a bad man. Every one. Bright, intelligent women who had held good jobs in the past. Now trying to survive. The streets are no place for a woman
@richardgoldstein94238 ай бұрын
Hands down, best video yet! Love your content.
@paul_domici8 ай бұрын
This is all so true! People are broke and refuse to live within their means! Great video Nicole!!! I started investing in my 401k at 18 and still going strong!
@SirReptitious8 ай бұрын
This is probably the most important thing of all. Whether you get your first job at 16,18, or 23 when you graduate college, have 10 or 15% automatically deducted. If your employer does a 401K match then do a 401K. If they don't you can just put it in an IRA. I didn't do this because I wasn't taught it. I had to learn it on my own later. Now I'm 57 and have very little put away. But at least I know that if things get bad like I'm about to be homeless or some other catastrophe happens, I have Mossberg insurance. You only ever have to make one payment so it never goes up. And it's quick and virtually painless. But don't be a dick and do it inside for others to clean up. Unless of course there is someone who caused you to be where you are, in which case you should absolutely arrange all their favorite items in the splatter zone to ruin as much as possible, be it their clothes, furniture, etc.
@PraiseGod4288 ай бұрын
Magazine subscriptions are one a lot of us just pay and honestly never read them. Nicole may have covered this already, just throwing it out there.
@crimestoppers18778 ай бұрын
Don't worry. I know a man at your age who lost it ALL ( savings, pensions, Social Security, property, and assets via a QDRO) in a disasterous divorce. Today he has recovered to a higher economic status by working multiple jobs and working on his own. The spouse quickly became the loser because of spendy habits and unable to have self control over a budget. As long as you have your health you can do it.
@rex_86188 ай бұрын
How do you invest? I know nothing about it. Im 21 and have watched a bajillion KZbin tutorials but it seems so overwhelming to me and I honestly don't even understand what investing means. I see these "stock share" videos and I don't understand how they do it.
@paul_domici8 ай бұрын
@@rex_8618 Rex it's simple and easy! If you stick to it you can retire early with lots of money! You open an account with a brokerage firm like Etrade or Charles Schwab. Then put 15 TO 20% of your pay in there and only buy an SP500 mutual fund! This fund holds the richest 500 companies around today like Apple, Amazon, Tesla etc. Don't invest in anything else cause individual stocks are very risky! Remember this is looong term so don't expect results right away. Just let it grow! I did it and am very happy I did! Also you can watch some Dave Ramsey videos. They teach a lot of common sense about investing and personal finance! Good luck!!!
@gene_takavic578 ай бұрын
This video spoke to me! I'm sitting here wondering if I should reveal this, but I am experiencing many of the ideas Nicole mentioned. I am 57, I don't have an emergency fund, I have 4-figure credit card debt, and I am looking for work. I am NOT living with my parent, but I do have a roommate and I want to get out. It is my responsibility to get myself out of my situation and make it better. I remain optimistic despite the media, government, etc. This video is the flame under my ass I needed. Oh yeah, I don't have a budget, mainly because I know the reality but I so want to live in denial. Thank you NIcole for this bit of motivation today! Sometimes, you just need to hear the truth from another person.
@rosieposie95648 ай бұрын
You can start changing things today. All the best for your future.
@Gotsomethingtosaynow8 ай бұрын
So glad that you have come to this realisation. Now, you can make a plan to deal with it. Break it up into small achievable steps. You can do this.
@thomaschew21918 ай бұрын
We (spouse and me) dug ourselves out of well into 6 figures consumer debt. It took us 56 months of hard work and saying no to anything we couldn't afford. It was difficult in the extreme to admit to ourselves that we were broke and quite humbling. Today we are totally debt free and have almost a years expenses in savings and I now max out my 401K, Sue puts 15% into her 403B and we have a taxable brokerage account. 180 degree change in our way we handle money. If we could do it anyone can including you. Just make up your mind and get going. We went from being stupid with our money to living quite frugal and it is such a great way to live knowing that we are not in the verge of financial ruin. Nicole is quite blunt and that is what I like about her, most on YT who cover personal finance are afraid to be blunt for fear that they will offend but I agree with her and I admit that we were stupid with our finances but we fixed the problem and will never go into the pit again. We didn't know how dark it is in the pit until we climbed out of it. Get on a budget and stick to it.
@OHbabe5748 ай бұрын
You can do it!
@rosieposie95648 ай бұрын
@@thomaschew2191 So true and very encouraging, well done on your financial turn around.
@GrowingonVancouverIsland8 ай бұрын
Your channel deserves a million subscribers! Awesome content, I've been watching for awhile but rarely comment
@dabneydee91098 ай бұрын
Good advice! I found that learning to tame your "wants" is a lot like taking sugar out of your diet. Once you lose the craving for sugar, you really don't miss it very much. Once you stop indulging your every want (and start saving & investing), you start to look at the stuff you used to want as unnecessary junk and a waste of $$.
@RobRoschewsk8 ай бұрын
If you cut everything out for a few months…. You might realize you don’t miss it.
@mattrenaud75738 ай бұрын
Very good point at @12:20, "The situation you're in may not be your fault, but it is your responsibility." Most people seem to have a real problem with this simple concept.
@anaisanwar84248 ай бұрын
No debt No car payment No credit bill Yes savings Yes 6 month emergency fund Glad I’m not normal!
@AccordingtoNicole8 ай бұрын
🙌🏼
@cgasucks8 ай бұрын
Yes. I'm quite unusual just like you!
@lot21968 ай бұрын
Same here. Home paid off, no car payments. Married 33 years.
@tinanolan14858 ай бұрын
No mortgage - paid off 10 years early. No debt No credit card 25% into pension On a written budget Yep I’m a weirdo stuff doesn’t make me happy experiences do.
@MooreRox2888 ай бұрын
At present, the most prudent consideration for everyone should be diversifying their income sources, ones not reliant on government support, particularly given the ongoing global economic challenges. This remains an opportune moment to explore investments in assets like digital currencies such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP. thanks to Flora Elkin for her guidance in these fields, her proficiency is outstanding
@MooreRox2888 ай бұрын
@floraelkin in t e I e g r am
@d8420008 ай бұрын
Investing has proven to be an incredibly beneficial decision. My cryptocurrency profits continue to play a substantial role in growing my overall wealth, reducing my reliance on my salary
@mavman01318 ай бұрын
I'd like to see that dating video you were talking about. Only because my curiosity Beckons.
@junkjanedoe8 ай бұрын
The reference to the herps 😂
@RM-jb2bv4 ай бұрын
Why is that funny? I don’t get the joke. Why is the canned herpes joke funny? I can just say “herpes” and the people around me -breakout- bust out laughing.
@seltzermint58 ай бұрын
This is all so true. I feel like MOST people I know fit the exact description you mention here with almost no savings, considerable debt, and wasteful spending habits. I was like that in my early 20s and it honestly scares me how many people are my age (47) and still living that way. I don't have a budget but I tick every other box. Our method is basically to have the lowest expenses that are easily met and put x amount into savings immediately so I feel like we just sort of bypass the budget thing. I know that doesn't work for everyone.
@Spot4art8 ай бұрын
Imagine NO DEBT. NO CAR PAYMENTS. NO LOANS. That should be your starting place. YOU know where YOUR money goes. Stop Door Dashing, stop eating out, stop frivolous spending. Pay off your debt. Get straight. Save your money then CHOOSE what kind of life you want to live. STOP BEING A VICTIM. LISTEN TO THIS WOMAN…Nicole, you nailed it.
@recoveringsoul7557 ай бұрын
I did all that but was married to an addict. Couldn't take it anymore. Tried to leave. Lost everything. He took the paid off home and all the cars and everything inside with slander. I was a stay at home mom with no options for work and too old to start over. Lawyers are expensive and useless.
@RM-jb2bv4 ай бұрын
Imagine marrying Taylor Swift! If you don’t, it’s YOUR fault! You have a better chance of marrying Taylor Swift than you do buying a house with cash.
@bairfreedom4 күн бұрын
@RM-jb2bv No.....location also plays a factor. 300k buys you a shitty mediocre house in CA. Take that same 30ok to Oklahoma and you can buy 5 acres and a 3000 Sq ft home
@republicunited21832 күн бұрын
Been that way since I was little. My dad taught me well.
@nkwari8 ай бұрын
Nicole you are the cold-blooded Canadian auntie that all kids should have!! Great advice.
@xkristixx8 ай бұрын
If you've watched the Financial Audit of the lady who had a payday loan with a 795% interest rate, she is the PRIME example why you should know the loan terms before signing. 😅
@ogvelociraptor2058 ай бұрын
Another valuable video about the realities of Adult Life. Nicole thank You so much for all that You do!
@jorlowsky4698 ай бұрын
The bluntness of Nicole is why I am subscribed to Her. Love that you get straight to the point instead of tip toeing around an answer. Cheers 🥂
@alexanderschwarm77558 ай бұрын
The way your videos can hug me is so indescribable, unique, informative, genuine, underground ... on and on thank's Nicole
@goofyrider8 ай бұрын
Your closing message about the feeling of having the ability to deal with life is way less stressful when you’re financially prepared resonates hard. It took me until my last 30’s to understand the this concept and did not reach my goal having solid finances that could handle emergencies. Great video always!
@jackkonnof41068 ай бұрын
When Nicole talks about signing things....Multiple times seeing a doctor or physical therapist I have caught them putting pages in that basically say I will pay for anything that the insurance company wont. I refuse to sign or initial those pages and I tell them if insurance doesn't cover it don't do it. When they tell me it's mandatory I tell them to cancel my appointment then. Usually they reluctantly omit the pages and continue on it just removes one of their abilities to rip you off.
@whattheflimflam8 ай бұрын
I bought a $300 plane ticket to see my sister in TX (I live in NY). Yes, it went on a Credit Card. But I pay it back at the end of every month and never incur interest (plus I get the points). Saving money feels good and spending it on stuff you care about and not mindless junk feels amazing. Now to sit back and pack my old backpack for my flight to the Lone Star State!
@kampar827 ай бұрын
I do the same, my credit card has an insurance policy, just in case I get ill or something.
@sarahb17408 ай бұрын
“You sign things you don’t understand” Thank you for including this. Financial literacy 101, you can’t get more basic than this advice. But no one seems to mention it.
@astyanax905Күн бұрын
The only issue I have with this, is unless you're a lawyer a lot of contracts are written in legalese. It'd be hard to have a lawyer go over everything before signing everything -- obviously important stuff should require a lawyer, but a cell phone contract or even car lease? Idk
@Miles-wy1zr8 ай бұрын
You look like you haven’t slept in years.
@AccordingtoNicole8 ай бұрын
This video was recorded at 1am after working all day so that’s valid 😂
@amg91638 ай бұрын
I am in my upper 50s, and while I am not living paycheck to paycheck, I do not value my money or my time (effort) to retain more of it. Every year, I waste tens of thousands of dollars, entirely unnecessarily. And while it may be likely that I do not respect myself (kinda hard to hear that and *admit* that), I think it's a deeper issue for me to self sabotage and punish myself. Only in the last few years have I come to the realization of why I put myself in that state.
@ogvelociraptor2058 ай бұрын
I feel attacked 😆 Seriously though I've learned to live a minimalist lifestyle and have a 401K and pension with My Job which I've been with for 16 Year's. My over spending in consumerism was brought on by filling a void and not caring about myself. I just turned 40 last May and feel a Strange type of rebirth if that makes sense.
@UnStrungHero8 ай бұрын
I think a video about the grown adults complaining like teens would be a very good topic. I know a few who are nearly 40 who fit this description.
@GrowingonVancouverIsland8 ай бұрын
An emergency fund is essential, definitely disturbing that 50% of Americans don't have one. I wonder what the percentage is for Canadians
@seltzermint58 ай бұрын
I agree. I know this will sound judgy but I am absolutely stunned sometimes when people in middle age with seemingly good jobs and regular lives share a go fund me for like 1 or 2 thousand dollars for an emergency. I am FAR from wealthy but the idea of not having a pretty good sized cushion of savings blows my mind and not even having like 2 months of expenses saved up? I don't understand it.
@greenmanatee64628 ай бұрын
Maybe the go fund me is their way of getting out of paying for something, instead they will just take advantage of other people's compassion and let them foot the bill
@iamjane96288 ай бұрын
This is the dose of reality that so many people need ! You are awesome. I meet so many "victims of the system" who are broke, but they have money for booze, cigarettes, going out to eat all the time, and especially TATTOOS ! WTF is up with that? Everybody has to get inked up to show how freaking "unique" they are. Sorry folks, but you are NOT that special.
@lanialost13208 ай бұрын
Tatts are so repulsive -- & have become a status symbol as well as look-at-me I'm so cool!
@princesspinksugar8 ай бұрын
@@lanialost1320Repulsive as well as incredibly impulsive…also quite trashy imo
@greg190719618 ай бұрын
Great video Nicole, wish I would have known this when I was younger. You are spot on!
@rotru497725 күн бұрын
I love my streaming but here's what I do. I cancel my membership and inevitable they come back with a cheaper deal. Wait it out a bit for the best ones. I've gotten 3 months of spotify for 9.99 My netflix is currently 6.77 I'm working on no longer using food delivery apps (hard because I have no transportation and am immobile) so I'll still have to useless grocery delivery. I do have some savings though as not as much as I'd like. I do cash envelopes and already have Christmas fully funded (since July) I only use my cc for my phone payment which is under $40 because my phone is several years old. I'm very lucky I've been living in the same apt for years because the prices in my Canadian city are ridiculous right now.
@dannyphoenix11278 ай бұрын
Kudo's to you Nicole raw and to the point. Your the Budgeting Ball Buster, which children of all ages ( 10>90) need to hear!!!👍👍👍. Love your style.
@turtearl8 ай бұрын
I needed that final sentiment about the feeling of financial security. I didn’t know what I was missing. As I work harder and achieve these goals, I have glimmers of that feeling and you are correct. It’s a better feeling than any purchase.
@prettypoetic8 ай бұрын
This is the smack in the back of my head that I needed 😂 I appreciate you for this 😊
@MikeOToole-bn8on4 ай бұрын
Your channel should be required viewing for every student in high school. Just using 20% of your ideas would end so much financial pain for people. People talk about their freedoms, but live under a mountain of debt. Are you really free? Instead ,your a wage slave. You have others making your choices as you go thru life. That's no way to live. Thank you for the way out of a maze so many people. are trapped within.
@LindaDooWop8 ай бұрын
You can talk about anything and make it fascinating! And you're so likeable too.
@minionofgozer74144 ай бұрын
Its funny I found this video, I'm literally spending my time in 2024 clearing my debt payments. Im also diligently putting whatever money I can afford into my savings accounts with a savings goal I'm already smashing 👍 Its great to find a youtube finance page with someone who thinks the same as me 😎
@leevillafane7 ай бұрын
I hope your You Tube income is doing well. I'm binge watching your vids, they're fucking great!
@hinkhall52916 ай бұрын
The sad part about these un_uck yourself videos is that the people who heed good advice usually don’t need it. Those who are impervious to good advice. It’s like putting gnarly graphic visuals on a pack of smokes, or worse, on every cigarette (yes I hear this might be a thing soon). If you couldn’t dissuade smokers from smoking with the visual of a pair of cancer ridden lungs on the pack of smokes then you simply won’t. I have a deadbeat brother and honestly: you can’t just say _budget_ to him. I mean he’s fully capable enough to do it. But he won’t. Some people are not motivated to do the logical thing. If they were they wouldn’t be in the same predicament every time. Some people are destined to do the ta rd dance over and over. The best thing he could do is hook up with a responsible girl who wants to take control of his finances.
@thisvagabondlife71328 ай бұрын
I have zero debt and I feel rich. I used to be in debt and felt like a slave to bills. 20 years debt free. 7 years with bad credit gave me the opportunity to become debt free and I stayed that way.
@paulo58618 ай бұрын
There is an emotional component to all this knowledge which should be taught in school and for me it was seeing my parents chaos over money and the feeling I had when I had saved enough money to buy what I really wanted vs the feeling of keeping what I had saved and still having the power to make that decision later in time. May I ask what started you on your journey and who influenced you the most and what was the pivital point if any that you recognized looking back in time?
@GrowingForever8 ай бұрын
Excellent video, thank you!
@Sumire-rere8 ай бұрын
Great advice. Though I do feel for today's 20-somethings bc of student loans. It's really tough to study and earn minimum wage or below. A person can only do so much, and not all of us are born equal, ability and cognitive-wise. Some jobs can be so stressful and strenuous that it leaves a person depleted from even trying to look for something else 😢 In an ideal world, everyone would've been taught to put away $500 a month starting at age 25 but by today's standard, a lot of 20-somethings are having to choose between 'heat or eat' and $500 a month is impossible for them to sock away when paycheque to paycheque is a reality despite their best efforts.
@grandpapete4178 ай бұрын
I still cut my own hair with a FLOWBEE and people laugh. So do I when I save $20 and get the haircut I want!
@amg91638 ай бұрын
@grandpapete417 $20? You might not be in a major city, or else you'd be saving at least $50 for a guy's basic cut and $125 for a women's basic cut. Even still, t's *win-win* for you because if you ever wanted to part with your Flowbee, you'd probably get $100 for it on eBay! Loved seeing that someone still has one and is using it! 😁
@rosalindbarnett2578 ай бұрын
Straight talk! Excellent advice. ❤️
@professormustard758 ай бұрын
I'd love to see a dating video. Not to be a weirdo, but whenever I watch you, I think to myself, "I hope my son can find a woman like Nicole when he's older." He's only 15 but has already saved close to 10K which is all in the stock market. He's a very frugal guy.
@1whitecottagelife7708 ай бұрын
this should be required lecture in schools. Common sense 101
@Lbbdavis8 ай бұрын
Facts! Preach it! Respect your money, respect your time, respect yourself!
@moni76528 ай бұрын
People putting everything on Klarna (a t-shirt, some make up) is insane!!!
@kampar827 ай бұрын
The only reason I do this is to have Klarna and the company that didn't deliver my product to settle things. An extra layer of protection maybe, I still don't pay in installments.
@Steven-ox3rm8 ай бұрын
Nicole, you made all good points. What gets me at work is that the number of people in their 20s who say that wont put at least 5 percent of their paycheck in a 401K, The company offers some good options and incentives. The best incentive is they match 100 percent up to 5 percent. Lets say weekly your 5 percent is 100 dollars the company matches that with 100 dollars which equals 200 yay.
@PraiseGod4288 ай бұрын
I am retired now, but it used to be you could only put so much in your 401k, I could be wrong.
@Steven-ox3rm8 ай бұрын
@@PraiseGod428 The limits on 401K for 2024 is $23,000. People over 50 can contribute another $7,500 for a total of $30,500.
@tomphillips26088 ай бұрын
When 401ks first came available, our company did a break room seminar. I wasn't impressed at the time (being in my late 20s). I signed up casually. So glad I did. Retired now. And although my wife's and my accounts are down from a 750k high, 650k isn't too bad for a retired grocery clerk.
@swagswap8 ай бұрын
Worth noting that you really have to check the expense ratio on your 401k fund(s). The "cheapest" fund available at my work is a 2% annual fee on the NYSE index. So they take 2% of everything I have in there and the end of every year, in exchange for... not managing it at all really. Their other funds go up to about 5%. Can't invest the 401k in anything but their limited choices. With a high expense ratio, you can lose all the money that your employer matched, and more. It can be a total racket. Compare to options like Vanguard that charge 0.04% annually for an index fund like that. The 401k takes 50 times as much!
@PraiseGod4288 ай бұрын
@@tomphillips2608 I had a 401k with Fidelity and the company I worked for made a match up to 5%. My husband both this, had our home paid for when we retired and are blessed. I just was asking didn’t there used to be a limit on how much money you could put in? I see where you answered me. lol, Ty.
@ColinSemple8 ай бұрын
The biggest failure people make is the excuses for why they don’t do what they should.
@oscarzepeda15588 ай бұрын
Thank you very much Nicole !!!! I definitely needed to hear this !!! I love the “ Not sugar coating the truth “…. I’m glad your channel is growing….
@GrowingonVancouverIsland8 ай бұрын
Mortgage is an exemption to the "I can't afford to buy it now" my home has more then doubled in value since I bought it
@violetagira86878 ай бұрын
You should be happy that it doubled in value ONLY if you plan on selling your house, If you plan on keeping it for a long time, there is nothing to celebrate my dear. Because the higher the estimated value of your house is, the more taxes you're paying per year. So think about it!
@santafilipina90208 ай бұрын
@@violetagira8687 This!!
@GrowingonVancouverIsland8 ай бұрын
I am planning to sell soon and downside so the double in value in definitely awesome@@violetagira8687
@K-E20198 ай бұрын
Yes ! I bought a condo in 2019 and sold it in 2023. I made over 300 K from the sale . They asked if we could be out in 10 days . I said , “ absolutely … No problem at all “ LOL Fortunately, when I buy real estate I do not develop any sort of attachment to it at all because of things like this .
@marcdc68098 ай бұрын
It's the best thing you'll ever own, but don't get fooled by the idea that it doubled in value... the reality is that it holds value, while banks create more money through lending and there's an almost 1 to 1 ratio between how much money goes around and how much a house costs... Therefore, your house doubled in value, but so did all the other houses, if you sell yours you won't buy two new ones... be careful when you consider taking out a mortgage on that current value, things might go down very fast and during a serious crisis like the subprime owning a mortgage free house was a real blessing.
@ericclark1338 ай бұрын
Not a lot of people lack all of these. I have a couple of them. But this is a fantastic video, and I love it! It’s inspiring and I will look for ways to change those habits.
@vicenary8 ай бұрын
Why isn't all of this being taught in schools?
@Ian-of9oi8 ай бұрын
I don’t know how to say this. I’m not even going to. Never mind.
@birgitmitchell58738 ай бұрын
Nicole, your videos are excellent and so relateable.
@Leahslittlepatchofparadise8 ай бұрын
I Love your brutal clarity 😂
@worldchanges108 ай бұрын
Smart cookie
@jodipeterson28468 ай бұрын
Nicole please, please do a video on Pre-need purchases on funerals. I just lost my family member very suddenly. He had no Pre-need purchases at all for nothing, no burial no cremation. So, I had to suddenly come up with the money to pay for funeral expenses. I want to scream to the world PURCHASE A PRE-NEED, so your family doesn't have to get a huge financial FUCK!!!!! We're going to die at some time right.
@lilblackduc73128 ай бұрын
I actually shared this one. That's something I rarely do...🇺🇸 👍☕
@georgetaylor28198 ай бұрын
Well said -- went to the audiologist yesterday and was told I have lost over 85% of my hearing and to rectify this I MUST buy a $4,500 dollar set of hearing aids. My reply? I do not have a hearing problem!! Others have a problem when they can not get me to understand what they are saying! Let's see what my wife of 56 years is going to handle this! LOL
@kimb8848 ай бұрын
I watch you every Sunday. This is one of your very best!
@AccordingtoNicole8 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@frankd23014 ай бұрын
As soon as I had a credit card I was paying it off every month.
@LovisaSvensson-iw7wc8 ай бұрын
I think "saving for retirement" is the wrong way to put it. I'd rather call it "saving" because unless it's a specifically a retirement account you're free to extract money from that account any any point in your life when you feel like you need it. The less you extract the better, though.
@tonyp93138 ай бұрын
I have a tax free savings account. So any money in there I don't touch it. I also have a high e savings account where I get 2% of money I have there. So every pay cheque I get I put money in there & don't touch that account. Then I have a regular Checking account where I use.
@trashtrashisfree6 ай бұрын
Spend less than you make. Live well within your means. Live debt free.
@astyanax905Күн бұрын
I enjoy your videos, I live in the same region as you and thought I'd mention... this is the first time you've said something I don't agree with. While you mention minimum wage jobs can be good stepping stones, you also say if you're 35 and living at home, it's on you.... you did acknowledge a lot of unfortunate life situations can put someone in that position, but I'm going to argue anyone stuck working minimum wage for years are being taken advantage of by the business owner, and no healthy person wants to be stuck working as little as possible without any respect or way of moving forward. If someone is in that situation, I'd argue they're not able bodied -- whether that means undiagnosed mental illness and or addiction, no healthy person wants to work a crappy low paying job, I'd argue they are unwell if stuck in that cycle. Depression or whatever. Anyway, I hope that made sense; you should be a politician, 99% of what you say is rather unbiased and you seem very level headed -- hmm... maybe that actually disqualifies you. Lol. Anyway, I look forward to all your new episodes
@jeran8818 ай бұрын
There needs to be a balance between living for today and living for tomorrow. Specially when you consider that tomorrow might never come.
@williamcollins9148 ай бұрын
Sending this to my youngest daughter. Maybe Nicole can get through to her. 🎉
@cindyfow58518 ай бұрын
Love your blunt common sense! Preach it!!
@donnabrady65947 ай бұрын
Finally making and working a budget [a little late in life] was one of the most self-empowering things I have ever done. My savings increased dramatically, and I paid off two mortgages in ten years. I have an emergency fund and owe nothing to no one! Great feeling of freedom. A budget is nothing more than an instrument that allows us to be intentional with our finances to support our long term goals. And we know how much we have to play with to create the fun of life! Just discovered your videos, Nicole, and LOVE your messages!
@Abraham.Lincoln227 ай бұрын
Dang. This woman is bad ass. 👍🇺🇸
@Rosebud25038 ай бұрын
YOU HIT THE NAIL. SUBSCRIBED.
@gingerstrait8368 ай бұрын
Another great video! Amazed at all your content and how real it all is. Thank you!
@smartypants19808 ай бұрын
The one that hit the most was "Dies it feel better to watch the new film John Campea went to see or does it feel better to not be in debt and have cash" You didnt say that word for word but near the end of the video you mentioned the feelling. You must have read "The Psycoligy of money"
@jeffmunkynutz15688 ай бұрын
Did you buy a painting AND a new white tee shirt? 😃 Flash as!!! You can call yourself "Canadian" you know..... Terence & Phillip didnt do THAT much damage. That wheely bin faceplant was a bit much, jesus.... Levi, light episode..... disappointing. Dont like where his bed is either but thats my ocd to deal with. Im sure you've calculated the exact position where he creates the least amount of problematic dust bunnies. Ya weirdo 😃
@lisawright60327 ай бұрын
Great talk. Thank you.
@jamescobblepot47445 күн бұрын
As a golden rule I never sign a single thing I dont have a really good understanding of. I can't say for sure, but I am pretty confident in saying this has saved me dozens of times.
@HannahCarney-c3c6 күн бұрын
I'm not convinced I can learn anything from someone who obviously bought a massive house but can't put any furniture in it.
@mauricemaple14308 ай бұрын
I didn't think this video was for me, and i was right and wrong. You continue to preach things that matter. I do most of these things, so im proud to be in agreement with you. Please keep up the great work Nicole!!!
@rhondamarcelissen29198 ай бұрын
This was great thank you. Also yes, I would definitely like to watch a video you’ve created all about dating. Anything you would like to discuss about it is sure to be interesting from where to find a partner, which dating sites would you suggest? How to tell if they are scammers, how to create an interesting profile? What do you think of matchmakers? Where are the best places to meet somebody special in Canada? What to do to make our chances better to meet someone special for us at ANY age including our 60’s? I’m very interested to hear your take on this subject and thank you for the suggestion!
@lazmotron8 ай бұрын
One of the worst financial mistakes you can make is to live in Canada. Your country putting a heavy financial burden on it's citizens and like all commonwealth countries it's only going to get worse.
@rosieposie95648 ай бұрын
I agreed, she will not like hearing this but from all I can see, Canada sucks in just a vast amount of ways compared to other developed nations. She would be better off elsewhere but then she would have to leave family and friends behind and that would be unacceptable to many people.
@AccordingtoNicole8 ай бұрын
I wish it wasn’t so cold here in the winter, but otherwise I’m doing fine.
@crystalh14028 ай бұрын
I’m still kicking myself over my 401k that was cashed out when I was 20 because I had shit knowledge about money. Thankful I started back up at 25 but damn that was a lot of potential compounded interest gone
@tonettesharp64188 ай бұрын
Yes, Crystal---own it, don't let it define you and learn from that mistake! Go, gal!
@waterbug11352 ай бұрын
0:05 "You're in debt. But somehow you're living paycheck to paycheck." Somehow??? I think I see the problem. In debt = more bills to pay = less money = paycheck to paycheck. Debt bad. Money good. Do people really think increasing debt will free up some paycheck cash? This stuff is so silly.
@whatwhattowns25 күн бұрын
I have a long way to go to be financially "mature" which today means learning to save/invest/increase pension contributions. And it can be really deflating when I think about it. But when I do start getting upset about my finances today, I zoom out and look at how they were 1 year ago. And it was so much worse. I'm no longer in my overdraft, zero credit debt, down to just one monthly payment (car) which I'm diverting my former monthly payments towards and clearing it fast enough that it's due to be gone by January rather than the planned term (5 years early! and saving so much that would otherwise become interest!). Just wanted to leave this comment here because some people who are trying hard to fix their finances might appreciate the reminder that today might be horrible, and you want to go back to old habits to feel better for a moment, but take a step back and look in context to how today is financially more responsible to this day last year, or last week, or yesterday.
@EmiliaOHara8 ай бұрын
Dating video. Do it!
@nygrl6102Ай бұрын
There's a mattress place here that offers 5 year financing...for A MATTRESS! I'd never be able to sleep on that.
@RobS2824 ай бұрын
i guess im not "normal" LMAO I HAVE NO BUDGET AND I SPEND MONEY FREELY AND ZERO DEBT pretty sure keeping track of your money and following a budget are 2 different things i keep track of every penny, but i dont follow a budget , i spend money freely lmao, many ppl have pets and cant afford them it costs money to borrow money,,,,, common cents i trust NO ONE we live in a society where no one takes responsibility for their own actions ,,,, its ridiculous its called instant gratification
@MinaRose20238 ай бұрын
This is great advice unfortunately I had to buy a puppy. I'm training it to be my service dog. I couldn't adopt because I'm disabled. So unfortunately I had to use my only credit card for her. But I agree with everything you said. I budget every single month. I still don't understand why I couldn't adopt a poodle from a rescue since that's what I needed. Well at least I've got the puppy. Now the challenges that come with it and also all the rewards.