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SuperApples@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•How do you introduce the Fediverse to other people?5·19 days agoI say it’s like Reddit but with more Star Trek and less everything else.
SuperApples@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Would you retire at 30 and live frugally?122·1 month agoWe “retired” when my wife was 30 and I was 33. That was nine years ago.
As Australians, healthcare is free, so that wasn’t a concern. (That being said, we also take out yearly travel insurance policies, which are surprisingly cheap compared to regular private insurance.)
That, not having kids (but we’ve met people who did a similar thing BECAUSE they wanted to spent time with kids), and living very frugally was what made it possible, and continues to make it possible. When we were working, after having paid off our small apartment, we could live on less than 20% of our combined income by being very tight.
The more you save, the more you can invest, and the less you’ll need invested to sustain yourself. It’s a positive feedback loop, and after three years of trying to be as frugal as possible, tracing every dollar, it became second nature.
After building our investments, our cost of living has gone up, but not by much. When you’re building your portfolio, being extra stingy pays off greatly. We have been slow traveling non-stop for the last nine years, because the cost of living is cheaper in (almost) every other country, even when you consider paying for short-term rentals. Next year we’ll hit 100 countries visited.
We’ve also done extra university courses, languages courses, and have a ton of hobbies. Even without work, there’s not enough time in the day if you have an active mind.
SuperApples@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Would you retire at 30 and live frugally?1·1 month agoFellow Australian, I retired at 33, which was 10 years ago now.
It’s crazy how quickly you adjust to living frugally, and spending any money just seems wasteful and unnecessary.
SuperApples@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Would you retire at 30 and live frugally?5·1 month agoHealthcare is free, so doesn’t matter.
SuperApples@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What in your country/area is totally normal but visitors get excited for?3·1 month agoDuring the economic boom, Japanese people had money, but traveling overseas was still scary if it wasn’t Hawaii or Cairns, and even if they had the courage, they didn’t have the vacation time to get all the way to Newfoundland and back. Hence the many various theme parks that popped up all over the country, each more bizarre than the last. Most of them are shut now, many abandoned in various states of decay. Quite fun to explore!
SuperApples@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What in your country/area is totally normal but visitors get excited for?4·1 month agoWe went to the mostly abandoned Anne of Green Gables theme park in Hokkaido, Canadian World, a couple months ago.
The translation of the book was done particularly well, I think. It was prescribed in schools. And the setting was attractive to those stuck in big cities.
Hey now, you’re a wok star, get your flame on, sauté.
Laughs in Lao. That bike doesn’t even have a wood oven.