Episode Transcript
My name's Anatasha Bamblet.
I'm a proud First Nations woman and I'm here to acknowledge country t Glenn Young Ganya Niana, kaka ya Ya bin Ahaka Nian our gay in Mbina, yakarum Jar, Dominyama, Domaga, Ithawakaman, damon Imlan Bomber bang Gadabomba in and now in wakah Ghana on yak rum Jar water Nadaa.
Hello, beautiful friends, we gather on the lands of the Aboriginal people.
We thank acknowledge and respect the Abiginal people's land that we're gathering on today.
Take pleasure in all the land and respect all that you see.
She's on the Money podcast acknowledges culture, country, community and connections, bringing you the tools, knowledge and resources for you to thrive.
Speaker 2She's on the Money.
Speaker 3She's on the Money.
Speaker 2Hello, and welcome to She's on the Money, the podcast that lets you be pervy about other people's money habits for educational purposes, of course.
Welcome back to another one of our money daries where we get to talk with one of our incredible She's on the Money community members all about their journey.
Let's jump straight into it.
Because this week I got an email and it sounded exactly like this, dear, she's on the money.
I got my first job at fourteen at McDonald's, and I've been working and saving ever since.
At nineteen, I bought my first townhouse while studying at UNI and trying to make a mortgage work on a part time income.
A few years later, my partner moved in and started paying rent, and that was the beginning of us building something bigger together.
We've since bought a home of our own, and that first property is now an investment.
I'm obsessed with your podcast.
I listened to every single episode.
I would absolutely love to share my story as a single young girl who started working at macis who now has a portfolio of one point five million dollars at the age of twenty five.
I'm so passionate about budgeting and money management.
Let's chat money, diarist.
So you're like a millionaire that you're like twenty five, isn't that crazy?
All right?
So tell me a little bit more about your money story.
Let's go back to you being fourteen and your first job being macs.
Speaker 4Hey.
So my money story probably started yet when I was fourteen, I was working part at McDonald's.
My parents were very much into my sister and I starting work as soon as we become fourteen.
So we worked at McDonald's and I was earning eight dollars an hour at the time that would have felt like a lot.
It was a lot, and I love the extra money that I was bringing in as well that I could spend.
So I was on eight dollars an hour.
I was working most weekends and night after school as well, and I gradually worked my way up through McDonald to become a manager.
By the ten I was seventeen.
Oh okay, cool, Yeah, it was really exciting.
So drew McDonald's.
I was able to save up enough money to buy my first car, and then from there I was able to also save my deposits for my first townhouse that I bought in two thousand and nineteen.
Speaker 2How much did you save for that?
Because that's crazy, like going from you know, fourteen, earning eight dollars an hour, obviously working up like earning some more.
But there are so many people and I mean, this wasn't that long ago, guys, like, you know, she's twenty five.
This is not like, you know, thirty years ago.
You know, you bought your first home and we go, oh, great, like bit unrelatable.
I feel like during this period of time you would have been seeing friends and family and stuff, still saying like, oh, the property market's really hard to get into.
How much did you save?
Like I'm jumping ahead, but like, girl, this is impressive as all.
Heck.
Speaker 4Yeah, so I saved thirty thousand dollars because the cownhouse was only two hundred and fifty thousand dollars that I paid for it.
Yeah, so they had it advertised for two hundred and seventy five thousand, but because I was part time, I was at university, I was obviously female, so they were like, oh, you could only borrow, like to purchase up to two hundred and fifty thousand, to borrow two hundred and twenty thousand.
Yeah, that's where that came from.
And I put my offer in.
The owner at the time was desperate to sell.
He was an investor.
He wanted to buy all the property, so he was like, you're the only person interested, I'll just sell it to you.
So that was really really good for me money when wikake that, and then I spent the next five years living in that property.
And studying at university.
And then once I graduated university, I saved up some money with my partner and we moved into our next house that we bought, which was last year in May, for seven hundred and forty five thousand.
Speaker 2Oh my goodness.
Speaker 4Yeah, we wanted a bit of house with some land, so he saved up a deposit because he was paying me rent at the time.
We were living in the townhouse, and so he saved the deposit and I drew the equity from my account and we bought this house I'm currently living in now.
Speaker 2Oh my god, So tell me you bought that townhouse.
And I know I'm jumping ahead to the like you know, investments and debts and stuff like I know people are thinking it right now, and we're real pervy.
You bought for about two fifty K.
What was the equity when it came to purchasing your like family home, I suppose with your partner.
Speaker 4Yeah, so I ended up drawing out one hundred and ten thousand dollars in equity.
To give a little bit of perspective.
Obviously, the property market has increased since then, so it's currently worth six hundred and fifty thousand sorry.
Speaker 2What you bought for two fifty and it's worth six point fifty.
Speaker 4Yes, yes, And the property valuation.
A year ago when I would buying this current house I'm living in, it was valued at five hundred thousand, but today it is valued at six hundred and fifty thousand, So another money win.
Speaker 2So when we're offline, you just give me all your property tips and tricks like I would put my money in there.
Absolutely, like you are getting way better return burns than anything you could in the share market right now.
And that's not to say that property is a better investment, Guys, do not take what I'm saying as that.
But like property on average does perform across the board lower than the share market.
Fine, we know that on the risk reward chart.
But tell me a bit more about this.
You live in Queensland and I won't you know, specify your location or anything like that, but I think it's good context because there's no way you could have bought a two hundred and fifty thousand dollars townhouse in the last twenty years in Melbourne.
But tell me about did you think that that would happen or were you just stoked to get property or what was your strategy around that, because girl, that's impressive.
Speaker 4Well, initially buying the townhouse in twenty nineteen, I was living at home with my parents and all my friends were getting brand new cars, and I said to my mom and dad, I was like, I need to buy something with all this money I'm saving, Like I need to put my money somewhere.
And that was when we started looking at properly because my parents were like, well, you've got a car, your car savically fine and have a brand new car.
It was like a five thousand dollars hold in Astra, so it wasn't anything crazy.
Yeah, And so that was where that came from.
And at the time, you couldn't have predicted the housing market would go the way that it has.
And I went in with the idea that it was going to be an investment property eventually, but I couldn't have ever imagined that it would have increased the way that it has.
And obviously COVID has a lot to play into that as well, so that has definitely helped the increase.
Speaker 2So a bit of strategy, but then also right place, right time, tell me why you know you're nineteen we are, I would say, still babies at nineteen.
Like, I look back and I remember thinking, when I was nineteen, I'm so mature, like look at me.
Go And then I look back and I go, who was that child?
Like how did she even get out of the house?
But when you were nineteen, how come you had such a different money mindset to your friends who were buying new cars and traveling and doing all of that, and you were like, I want to do something constructive with my money.
Did you grow up with really financially literate parents or like, how did you know to do this?
Because that's not normal in a nice way, it's perfect, Like I just I wish I had that, but also I kind of did in a way.
My dad was an accountant, but I thought I knew better than him, so I listened to nothing that he said.
Speaker 4But's fair enough, and as you do at nineteen, like you just want to go out and live your best life.
Speaker 2Yeah, I knew everything.
I wish I knew what I thought I knew at nineteen.
Speaker 4Yeah, And I think that's why I really resonated with your podcast, because I did have really like financially literate parents.
My dad said to us when we first started working at McDonald's that we had to transfer at least half of our pay to our savings every week, and then he wouldn't charge like ran for board.
Speaker 2Oh I love that.
As long as you were saving, he was very happy to support you exactly.
Speaker 4So we would transfer money every week, and it was in an account that was like a bonus interest type account, and we couldn't access it without my dad coming with us in the bank.
So we would have a bank book and we would write down every week how much we try andsfer and watch it grow.
And then when we got our statements, you would see the interest come through and then you go, oh, bonus.
Love that, and it teaches you you're compulsively save.
And I remember my dad says all the time.
I remember we took you shopping once and your mom pulls out a dress and she goes, you should buy this dress.
It's beautiful.
And I looked at the price and it was like forty dollars and I said to my mom, Mom, that's like five hours work for me.
Absolutely not.
Speaker 2You're an icon.
Yeah it's true, Yeah, it's true.
Speaker 4It adds up.
And my dad was like, because we were living at home, Mom and Dad would pay for everything that we needed to get through school and all of our essentials.
But if we wanted to go out on the weekends, we wanted to eat cake away, or we wanted to buy clothes, that was on us.
And because we were on such a low wage, you learn the value of money.
And yeah, I'm really grateful for that because that's the reason why I am where I am today.
Speaker 2I feel like that's really relatable as well, Like so many of my friends and I and these make it's no sense because you know, if I put myself back into like your shoes right now, my hourly rate is not the same like as it used to be.
Like you know, I'm a bit complex, I'm a business owner, ebbs flows whatever.
But I still have in my head one of my first jobs that I was relatively well paid in, I was earning twenty eight dollars an hour, and for some reason, whenever I think about purchasing something, my head goes back to that hourly rate of twenty eight dollars an hour and ago, that's a lot of money.
If you think about it, Do I earn twenty eight dollars an hour?
No, No, I earn more than that.
That is a privilege, but like, for some reason, my money mindset is stuck at that it's twenty eight dollars and I think fifty two cents, like fifty ish cents, right, and I just have it in my head and anything that's like in my head, I'm like, oh my god, brunch is like two and a half hour's worth of work.
Like that's how I see it.
And it makes no sense, but it does.
Speaker 4It does, and I think it really helps you learn the value of money and how much things cost.
And even to this day, I'll go out, we'll get a meal, say at the pub, and I'll always go for like the twenty dollars burger and chits as opposed to the forty dollars steak, like and my mind just goes that way.
Speaker 2And when you do that, I think it's really good because I was.
I was talking to someone the other day and they're like, Victoria, I know that I should save.
I am very clear on that.
I've listened to all your content.
But in the moment, I've got the pub menu in front of me, and I go the twenty dollars burger or the forty dollars steak, and I just know that I'll love the steak more, and I go, what the heck, like, I'll just buy the steak.
What about your money mindset?
Do you think means that you're very happy to lean towards the cheaper option, even if there's maybe an option on the menu that you're like, yeah, Like, you're right, if both of them were twenty dollars, I'd probably pick the steak.
But it's not How do you make those decisions so consistently that are putting future you first without leaning into all ways being instant gratification.
Speaker 4I think having goals is the most important thing for me, Like I talk to my partner about this quite often, having a goal of what we're working toward, because then when I go out for dinner, I go, Okay, yeah, I would love the steak, but I'm going to have the burger because then that twenty dollars that I could have spent I'm going to put towards my future wedding, for instance.
And then I go, Okay, that's going to be more worthwhile for me, and it's going to get me closer to my goal than the steak in this moment.
Speaker 2Yeah, I love that, But it's also so important to have these conversations because I'm the same Like I used to be the steak girly and always pick like, oh, the most expensive thing, but now I'm like, ah, you know it's a Wednesday.
Yeah, we are out with my friends, Like I don't need an expense.
You're like, we're not celebrating anything like pipe down Victoria.
I feel like the one thing that we struggle with is not comprehending the fact that we need to save or the fact that we should invest, especially if people are listening to this podcast right like they're in the right place.
It's the in the moment decisions.
It's the feeling like you're missing out.
It's the analysis.
Paralysis is the comparison.
Do you find yourself looking at your friends who have maybe nicer cars or bougier experiences and going, oh, I'm go anna bit envious?
Or are you just running your own race and you're very cool with it.
Speaker 4I think I definitely youth do back when I was nineteen and I was saving all this money and I felt like it wasn't going towards anything.
At the time, I definitely compared myself as you do, try and keep up with trends and where people are at who are similar to you and in the same stage of life.
And I definitely have friends who have like nice new cars and they go on big holidays, and I'm going, oh, I would really love that for myself.
But I know that's coming in due time, Like I know that if I put my mind to it, I can get there too.
And I also recognize I am in a different stage of life as other people, and I recognize that it's all about creating wealth for my future and making sure that I'm in the best possible position I can be.
And I really resonate with when you talk about financial freedom because that's something that I really want myself as well.
Speaker 2I love this tell me more about today because I can see you nobody else can, which is an absolute privilege money, Doris, that is a very nice engagement ring.
So where are we at with life?
If I see something sparkly like my eyes light up, I am a dower bird at heart.
So I feel like you know from fourteen macas buying your first home, You've just bought your first property.
I feel like life's happening around this.
So tell me a bit more about that.
Speaker 4Yes, So at nineteen years old, when I bought that first townhouse the same year I met my current fiance.
I met him in June that year, and then I bought the cowhouse in December, and so we don't live in together for six months, and I said to him, you know, would you like to move in with me?
And I knew it was very early in our relationship, but at the time I didn't have anyone off, but I really wanted to be with and or live with, and so he said yes, and we moved in together and we've been together ever since.
We got engaged this year in April, and he's the one who, yeah, helped save the deposit and we bought this house that we're living in together now.
Speaker 2So I'm very, very lucky.
Speaker 4He's really great, and he's really helped navigate our goals together.
We come up with the goals list together and what we want for our future, and he's really on board and he really like worked towards saving for the same goals as meat, which is really great and I really value that.
Speaker 2I love that, and I love asking about people's love lives as well.
I'm like, oh, who's your partner, have you got a partner or do you want that like, what's going on?
So tell me about today, Like, you know, you got engaged in April twenty twenty five, which is so exciting.
What do you do for work?
How much money are you earning now?
Speaker 4Yeah, so I work as a pharmacist.
I'm currently earning one hundred and fifteen thousand a year.
And yeah, today we are currently working towards going on holidays, and we also are saving towards our wedding as well.
So I'm going Gigpan next year in March, and then we're getting married in September twenty twenty seven, which is really exciting.
And we've come up with like a little savings plan so that we can put money away every week towards our wedding.
Because I recognize that weddings are quite expensive, but I am similar to you, Victoria, where I would love the traditional wedding and I want to be able to enjoy that with all of our family and friends.
Speaker 2Yeah, and you have to start saving.
Sorry, you just have to, like gets so expensive and it piles up.
But I'm so glad when you said I'm getting married September twenty twenty seven, I was like, Queen, You've got so much time and then you Sorry, what a smart queen as well a pharmacist at twenty five earning more than one hundred grand.
Sorry, what the heck?
Speaker 4Yes, yes, I try, I try so.
My pharmacy degree is very rewarding, and I'm very lucky that I work in an industry where I can give back to the community and have an impact on other people's lives.
And yeah, I really love that.
Speaker 2Stop it.
You are an absolute angel, all right, So tell me a bit more.
You said you and your partner have some big money goals.
You've bought your property this year.
What are the other goals you're working towards?
The wedding I'm assuming is on there.
Japan is probably on there.
What else have we got?
Speaker 4Yeah, so I'm heading over to Japan in March.
And we have been saving since we bought this house last year.
So last year in May, when we bought this current house, we have been putting away money for Japan every week, and we also put the same amount of money away of our home loan, so we make extra payment of the loan as well, and that's the deal.
We put equal announce away every week, and then we eventually saved up enough money so over the last year to go to Japan, so we booked that so much next year, which is kind of like our reward to say, you know, you can have the house and you can have the built, but you can also save for a holiday.
It may take a bit longer than you know other people, but we are working throward that.
And the last thing I wanted was to go into debt for a holiday or a wedding.
So that's why we booked our wedding for twenty twenty seven.
And we've got a plan where we're putting both putting money away every week towards that as well, So we're kind of putting our things in all the buffets.
Speaker 2At the moment, you are a woman after my own heart.
Now let me be pervy.
What type of job does your partner have and what type of income are we playing with their?
Speaker 4Yes, so he's an area sales manager.
He earns ninety thousand dollars a year.
Buddy also gets the fringe benefit tax.
Oh very nice, yeah, yeah, yeah, how good.
Speaker 2So between you you've got a pretty good income, like two hundred grand plus.
But at the same time, you are children in my head, like anyone who's under thirty instantly a child still like you're just a baby, but you seem to have your goals very outlined.
Can I be really perfey?
I love shiny things.
I love a wedding.
Have you decided on your wedding budget?
If so, what does that kind of look like?
What are we saving towards?
Speaker 4Yeah, so I actually use your wedding budget tool that you live a spreadsheet that you created.
Speaker 2It's free, by the way, guys, just download on my website Wedding budgeting spreadsheet.
Speaker 4Absolutely.
So I went through your wedding budget spreadsheet and I also got quote from vendors that I thought I might want to use, And I've got a few different quotes and I've plunked them in there.
And I'm hoping to do my wedding for around thirty thousand dollars.
I know, so that that might be expensive to some or and expensive to others, but that's the budget I'm currently working in so by my partner, and I'm putting away one hundred and sixty dollars late each week between now and August next year.
We will have money in there to pay for the wedding.
Speaker 2Yeah, and tell me, because like I know that everybody's wedding budget is different, right, and like someone will be like thirty thousand, I would never and then to be honest, like thirty thousand for the wedding I wanted absolutely not enough.
I'm so sorry, And that's okay.
What style of wedding are we going for?
Like, you know, you've obviously already done the budget and kind of worked out on average we need this, and I'm sure you're probably going to work out a buffer and whatnot as well, But like, what kind of wedding are we having?
Are we having five million people turn up?
Speaker 4No, definitely not.
We're thinking about sixty people.
We actually have our engagement party next weekend, so exciting.
Yeah, so the people who were coming to our engagement party, we're hoping we'll still be the people that will attend our wedding.
So we're thinking about sixty people would be ideal for our wedding.
Speaker 2Yeah, and what so you want a traditional wedding, does that involve a church or like what kind of semantics does that involve?
Speaker 4Yeah, so we're not going to have a church our wedding.
We've actually booked a venue which is on top of the mountains, so we'll have like a mountain style wedding with a reception hall on the same property, so I think it's a private property, so it's at DIY type wedding.
So we bring all of our vendors to the venue, which would be really exciting.
Speaker 2Adore.
That's what we did for our wedding.
I mean, not the same style, but like making sure that the ceremony was at the same place as the reception meant our guests didn't have to travel.
But then also because we've just booked the reception, they didn't charge us to get married at the venue, so like that was a bit of a money win.
Speaker 4Absolutely, And this private venue they have like a huge house that sleeps like twelve people, so we can have all of our family and like closest to us stay, which is really important to us because we're very close to our family and friends.
So we wanted to have a wedding where everyone could be involved and be a part of.
Yeah, our special moment.
Speaker 2That's so special.
I'm so glad.
I asked, all right, let's go to a really quick break because we'll dive back into more of the money stuff.
I want to talk about your investing strategy, more about debt and then your best and worst money habits.
So guys, if don't go anywhere, all right, money dirist, We are back and I want to talk investing.
When it comes to property, you're really good at that.
You bought your first property in twenty nineteen for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and last year when you got a bank val it was worth six hundred and fifty.
Like I would love all your tips and tricks, I just feel like that's a really good flipping deal.
Are you investing in any other way, shape or form.
Speaker 4I'm currently not investing in any other way at the moment.
I've been listening to your podcast, and I've been interested in shares, and I'm also thinking about potentially investing in a pharmacy.
So they're all things that I'm thinking about because we've got the equity in both property.
If now I'm going do we buy another property?
Do I put money in shares?
Do I buy a business.
I'm kind of in a stage where I'm unsure which way is the best to go, but I'm definitely interested in having a potential furred investment.
Speaker 2That is so exciting.
Can I be real pervy to own a pharmacy.
You are a pharmacist, so that makes sense natural extension.
How does that work?
Like do you have to find the location?
Do you go call up Amcow and say, hey, I'd like a location?
Like how does buying a pharmacy work.
Speaker 4I'm still in the very early days of like deciding so as fire them aware there are your big franchises that will offer some type of funding when you purchase a pharmacy with them, but there are lots of legal restrictions, particularly in Queensland.
You can only have like I think it's a maximum of six pharmacies, and you have to be a certain distance apart as well, you can't be side by side with another pharmacy retailer, so there's like certain laws around that that it has to navigate.
And no one in my family own a kind of retail business, so it's all very new to me.
I don't know much about it, but I'm definitely interested in having conversations about business.
I feel like that might be the next set for us.
Speaker 2That would be a very I'm given you're so young that I mean, business is obviously risky, like any type of investment, but given you have the background and maybe you find a location that works really well for you, Like that feels like kind of an essential service business.
Like that feels like a bit of a no brainer in a way.
If you've got the funds and access to be able to do something like that, that's cool.
Speaker 4Yeah.
I feel like I'm the kind of person who if I put my mind to something and I keep pushing, like I can get there.
I just need to believe in myself.
And I know that I'm twenty five, so I've got some years in me where I can really invest and put a lot of hard work into potentially owning a pharmacy and building that business up.
Speaker 2I can already say that you do the hard work girlfriend, like I can already see this working for your personality.
That's crazy cool.
I love it.
So tell me about debt.
I want to dive back into this property conversation.
So you have your first investment property.
You purchased it for two hundred and fifty K.
What's owing on that mortgage currently?
Speaker 4Yeah?
So, like I said, we had you, I drew the equity out of that property to purchase the next property.
Did we currently owe three hundred and twenty thousand on that property?
Speaker 2Yeah?
Cool?
That makes a lot of sense.
It's still worth six fifty, so that's a good deal.
And now tell me about your second property.
I believe you said you purchased it for seven hundred and forty five thousand dollars.
What's the mortgage look like on that.
Speaker 4We currently owe five hundred and twenty thousand, So a year ago when we bought it we owed five sixty but with then paying money off every week as well as making the minimum payments.
So yeah, we've paid forty thousand dollars off in the last year, which is really nice.
Speaker 2Look at you, guys, go and is property something that you're going to continue to invest in and you're looking at it going, oh, once we get a bit more equity, like with another property, or is this where that business conversation kind of comes in, because obviously you could potentially use some of that equity to purchase a pharmacy exactly.
Speaker 4So at the moment, we're not too sure.
I do love buying property, and I think it's a good investment, and obviously we've already got one, so I kind of know what to do and what it's about now.
But the only thing is the property market has increased so much since the first investment.
I don't know that if I purchase again it will have as good of a luck as the first fund did.
So we're just kind of pussing us at the moment.
I'm in that bitter space where we're like, we just keep paying extra money off our mortgage.
Bring that down.
Hopefully the equity will increase and then we can look at maybe a business instead of and another investment.
At the moment, no, I love that, and that's why I was asking.
But at least you know what you've got your head screwed on.
You're like, I don't know if it'll worked the same way it did in twenty nineteen.
It's worth some investigating, though.
Tell me, are there any other outstanding debts that you have?
I only have a hex step.
Speaker 2That is cool.
How much does a pharmacy degree cost?
Speaker 4Yeah, not chief.
It was about forty five thousand dollars, So I currently have a thirty seven thousand dollars hex stet.
Speaker 2Hey, that's not too bad, especially with your income.
That's just going to tick away over time.
And obviously your income over time will increase as well, which is very nice.
And it could completely go off the Richter scale.
If you start becoming a business owner and that changes how fun.
Absolutely absolutely so tell me, now, do you have a really good money habit?
I feel like you've had really good money habits this entire time.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm looking at this being like, mate, if I was nineteen and you were my friend, I would have been so envious.
Tell me, what do you think is your best money habit.
Speaker 4My best money habit would probably be my ability to budget.
I think that putting that money away every week is definitely something that I'm good at, and I'm good at holding myself accountable and making sure that I do it consistently.
So I definitely say that is my best money habit.
Speaker 2What's your worst though.
Speaker 4I'd say probably spending money on clothes.
I do love a good shopping hall, especially when my favorite retailers send me a text message and say that having a flash sale and I'm like, oh my gosh, you guys know how to get me.
So I'll probably say that's my worst money habit where I'd buy clothes online clothes is my worst.
I'll buy clothes and I'll do like a hall of clothes maybe once a while.
Speaker 2Well, you can FaceTime me.
I would love to see your halls.
Like, don't get me wrong, I feel like you're still probably is that blowing the budget?
Like is that blowing it out?
Or are you just like, no, it's not, but I really shouldn't be.
Speaker 4Yeah, it's not blowing the budget.
But there are from weeks where I would do a clothing buy and I'd really cut myself fine for the week.
You know, where you leave yourself with that last five ten dollars and you go, You're gonna have to make this look this that you're the one that did the order.
Speaker 2Yeah, you did this to you, You did this to you.
Speaker 4Literally, I'm like, now I got a little bit of.
Speaker 2It, so I can absolutely resonate with that.
In fact, I like still have my emergency funds and stuff.
Sometimes I'm like, oh, there's not many fun money left.
Let's just see how this week pans out.
Tell me, now, at the very start, you said, I reckon I'm a B minus or a bee.
What do you think given everything you've told me, what do you think I think A firstly?
And then what do you think it would take for you to get to being an A or an A plus?
Speaker 4You're probably thinking maybe I'm more of a minus B plus kind of girl.
Speaker 2I would say much better than that.
Yes, okay, well thank you, that's very night.
But like, look what you've done, You're still a child.
Thank you.
Speaker 4I would probably say maybe maybe like a B plus, maybe a B plus.
Speaker 2But what would it take to get to a plus?
Speaker 4I think more knowledge.
I think I need to learn more about different perhaps of investment, which is I think if I can learn more about where I can put my money, I can make better choices.
Speaker 2I can help you with that.
We can be best is when it comes to money.
Speaker 4That's why I love your podcast.
I'm a religious listener, and I've been going back and listening to old episodes as well, because I saw that you have your playlist with like how I listened to the Property Playbook, and then I listen to like how to save for Christmas and how to save for travel now that we've got travel coming, so I can make better choices.
Speaker 2Yeah, Love, I'm so excited for you, girlfriend.
I'm so excited that you're in my community.
You're twenty five, you are absolutely smashing it.
You are going to retire, so happy, so healthy, so just everything Like I find this so inspirational, like so many people might be like geez, Louise, I'm twenty five, and that's just not possible for me.
And the reality is it is like you just have to pull your finger out and do some work.
Start small, and we're not talking about buying our first home for a million dollars like you purchase first for two hundred and fifty thousand.
And don't get me wrong, I don't know a lot of properties nowadays that are two hundred and fifty thousand.
But it's not like opportunities like that don't exist, but they are only going to become opportunities you could engage in if you have the savings and you have the discipline and you've been working towards it.
I think that getting off track these days is so easy because you just go I'm disheartened, I can't be bothered.
Why would I even start saving?
But like from little things, big things grow money direst you are a perfect example of that.
Speaker 4Like how good.
Speaker 2I'm just I'm so excited I get to share this with my community.
Thank you, thank you so much.
Speaker 4And I have friends who are in situations where they're saving for houses and they're struggling because the housing market is so bulletowed and women and prices are so expensive compared to what they were.
So I definitely recognize that I got very lucky at the time that I purchase the townhouse.
But I do hope that people can listen to this and potentially feel inspired that you can do it on your own.
Like I was just nineteen and that, like I, all I did was consistently saved, and I just had to keep putting that money away.
And at the time that was maybe one hundred dollars or two hundred dollars a week, but like you said, it grew into thirty thousand dollars, which was a lot for me at the time, and I was like, oh my gosh, I need to put this money into something so that I can actually see my money is going somewhere.
And then yeah, from little things, big things grow.
And I just hope that maybe someone out there who thinks it's too hard can listen and be like, actually, all I need to do is just start somewhere.
Speaker 2Just start one hundred percent.
You have to start with the foundations, because yes, property might become a part of the strategy, or the share market might be or there might be other opportunities, but if you don't create the base, and you don't have the foundations, and you don't have savings and you don't have an emergency fund, the opportunity aren't coming because even if they come, you can't seize them, you can't do them.
So it's just it's something that I'm obviously wildly passionate about and have been talking about it since twenty nineteen actually, so we're right on par together.
But I'm just so excited that stories like this are coming out of my community, and you're so happy to share so that other people can learn.
You're an icon.
Speaker 4Thank you, Thank you, And I recognize that my parents taught me very similarly to how you speak with the community, and that's why I was like, I really would love the opportunity to come on here, because I feel like more people need to hear about the way the budget and the way to save.
And I was very lucky with the upbringing that I had, but I recognize it and that a lot of people had that.
Speaker 2No they didn't, but they can create it resources like Shees on the Money, and there are a million different other pieces of content out there.
You could engage in.
Yes, if you had parents, you were more privileged one hundred percent.
But a lot of privileged people do not make the most of the situations that they were in, are in far worse positions than you would expect of them, just because we don't know what we don't know, and we maybe don't seize opportunities in the ways that we could.
And I think that, whilst yes, it is so beautiful that you're like, yeah, I want to acknowledge my privilege here.
I love that, I really really do, I also want to acknowledge that it wasn't just privilege that got you there.
It was hard work and you had to do that because you could have just been like, it's pretty easy living at home.
Hey, I'm going to spend all my money on clothes and shoes and makeup and I want a new cup.
Those are easy decisions to make.
But a lot of what has happened in your life is not due to luck, My love, it is.
Yes, we started ahead of the race, that's fantastic, but you still had to do the race.
Speaker 4Yeah that's true, that's true.
Speaker 2Well I'll let you go, but thank you so much.
This has been an absolute pleasure.
Speaker 4Thank you so much for having me.
I really appreciate it.
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