May, a month in review.

I was able to get out of the house this weekend, so yet again I am a couple of days late. However, I did capture all of the figures prior to market opening on Tuesday, so these will 100% be April numbers.

Vanguard Roth IRA – $96,415 (-$198 from last month).  No change in my distributions here.

TSP – $88,249 (-$12 with -$2.3K invested).  No difference from last month and no changes in contribution allocations. Happy about the dip as that meant I bought more shares for cheaper!

Taxable accounts – $43,027 (+$69, no additional investment). I had some extra cash freed up (more on this below), but did not quite find a good buying opportunity. Hopefully this month I can deposit a good chunk as long as something catches my eye.

Crypto – $19.6K (-$26K, no additional investment).  As I mentioned last month, I was waiting to see that 50K overall mark. Well, I saw it and sold ~6 of my ETH at around 3.7K each. I did end up keeping my entire stash of XLM coins (10K). From Elon all but admitting that he is manipulating the crypto sector on national TV, China clamping down, and energy concerns, I feel very much at peace about walking away with the extra 21K and change. I do not plan on re-investing into this space at all in the foreseeable future. While the technology is solid, the premise behind it being a store of value is getting more and more muddled for my liking.

Cash – $28.3K (+$21.6K).  As I mentioned, the huge jump was from selling off some of my crypto. At this point, just doing some more research on where it makes sense to park the money in!

Due to market fluctuation, my NW has decreased ever so slightly. Still happy where I am at though and excited for having some extra cash for hopefully near-future buying opportunities.

As far as my life enjoyment outside of work, that will get its own separate post in a couple of days as we had a recent long weekend and my wife and I definitely took full advantage of – in Rome!

April, a month in review.

Unfortunately, when I tried to do this over the weekend, the TSP site was down for maintenance and I just did not have the time to do it on Monday.  This does mean that my total numbers are slightly into May since I got all my figures to write this up after markets closed on Monday night.  That being said, it should not make much of a difference.

Big picture wise, Italy is starting to open up and we have immediately started going out to restaurants and some local travel, which does mean spending money.  That said, I do not have a single regret so far.  I will expand more on that after the numbers…

Vanguard Roth IRA – $96,613 (+$2.45K from last month) No change in my distributions here.

TSP – $88,261 (+$7.5K with -$2.3K invested) Nothing much to add here either, just staying the course.  Still have 100% of my contributions going to the S fund, with a current 55/45 distribution between the C and S funds. Glad to see that with the remaining contributions I can still add I am on course to hit 6 figures in this account by the end of year.

Taxable accounts – $42,958 (+6.15K with -$3K invested). The past month I threw in $3K into $BUD as my dividend purchase.  So far I’m up just under 9% on my position and will hit the div-ex date today (Tuesday).

Crypto – $45.6K (+17.4K, no additional investment).  Crypto is getting a bit crazy and is starting to be quite a substantial piece of my investments (getting close to 20%!).  I am almost at my personal “moon” price target. I was initially waiting for my ETH position to hit $50K overall, although I am moving towards taking out half as soon as my overall crypto balance hits that $50K number and diversify in some additional stocks.  I am currently seeing and hearing 60 year old+ retirees talking about dogecoin, which means it’s about that time to get out. I polled my coworkers today, and just about all of them are investing in it “just because the charts keep going up”, which is just another indicator that we’re getting a bit close to the cliff. Maybe (hopefully for many!) I am wrong, but I would sleep better once I go back to <10% of my NW in crypto.  Keeping in mind my initial gamble was ~$3-4K, I am quite fortunate to be in the current position, but since this WAS 100% a gamble, I am dead set on waiting for the $50K mark.  Thanks to the military giving me ~60% of my income tax-free, I should pay nothing in long-term capital gains tax, so basically, my $4K turning into  $25K is something I am looking forward to.  I will leave the rest there (in my case, will be 6 ETH and 5K XLM) in case ETH hits BTC levels of silliness down the line…

Cash – $6.7K (-$1.1K).  This will likely be decreasing throughout the month with travel and dining becoming available once again.


Life enjoyment wise, my mood is definitely picking up.  The weather is full on spring/early summer and with vaccinations happening across the country and cases dropping, we are no longer prisoners of our own home. We have been going hiking with our pooch as well as hitting up a couple of our favorite restaurants throughout the first week of things opening up and are loving being able to see and eat things we kind of took for granted.  We have also had more company at our house, along with meeting some friends out and visiting others in their own home. Although I am usually quite introverted, I have not minded the social contact after being cooped up for so long. Sure, this means my savings rate is “plummeting” compared to the past couple of months, but it is important to enjoy life and not be a slave to the money. 

Speaking of more traveling and so on, this month we have another 4 day weekend coming up thanks to memorial day.  We will likely attempt to go to Rome and will try to stay with our free hotel nights thanks to our credit card perks that we have not been able to take advantage of in the last 1.5 years due to my deployment and COVID, which I am DEFINITELY excited about as I have still not yet been (yes I know, despite spending nearly 5 years in Italy…).As country borders all over are opening up, my wife is planning on heading to the US to visit her family at the very end of the month which we are paying for with our credit card points, so we are quite happy that we can take advantage of the various perks all of our CC’s provide.


Not counting crypto (since I am not cashing out until I hit a certain number no matter what, so it’s either all or nothing) or the equity in my rent homes, my NW has gone up $15K over a month to total $234.5K.  Subtracting out the contributions/additional investments I made puts me at an investment gain of $9.7K, or roughly my total monthly pay which makes me feel pretty great typing it out.

I again “beat” my personal stretch goal again by $1K.  I doubt that I can keep this going, but in the sake of striving for success, I will keep it the same as last month. $1K deposit in taxable + $1K as a “stretch” goal.

March, a month in review.

The month started with us getting our stimulus check, which shortly after found its way into the stock market. Similar to last month, we were able to put aside over $5K towards our various retirement accounts.

Unfortunately, Italy has remained pretty locked down to where we are essentially locked to getting take out/delivery from restaurants, but other than that we basically sit at home (besides getting groceries and walking our dog). As much as I like to see my accounts grow in value, this is definitely getting a bit old, and I am ready to travel some more…

Besides that, let’s move on to the numbers for this month:

Vanguard Roth IRA – $94,158 (+$613 from last month)

TSP – $80,743 (+$9.7K with -$2.3K invested) As of March 31, 2020 my 12 month personal investment performance is a whopping 67.4%! Obviously this is basically measuring the run-up since the “flash” crash of COVID, but it is damn nice to see those kind of numbers…

Taxable accounts – $36,811 (+5.6K with -$3K invested) The main big thing for me is that I managed to pick up PFE at $35.42 while today it’s trading at 36.35. With the $3K dumped into Pfizer, my average cost basis for PFE is (of this moment) finally in the green!

I am also keeping an eye on DAL and NCLH (and a few dividend stocks) to hit my price targets to buy into as well.

Crypto – $28.2 (+8.2K, no additional investment) Pretty nice to see this. Although there was quite a decent run up the last couple of days – which means I am counting April a little bit – it’s still a very positive outcome!

Cash – $7.8K (+$2.8K) Basically, the $2.8K is coming from the stimulus check for me and the wife. The good news seems to be that this upcoming month, I will once again be able to throw about $3K into the market should the price points appeal to me. Overall, I am very glad I have SOME cash sitting around.


For things I enjoyed or accomplished this month, things are too similar to the last month…

Work has not let up at the slightest. It almost seems like a hydra where each issue I fix, another 3 take its place. We went back into a shift work schedule where we have been in office alternating weeks. I now have a couple of new folks at the office as well, which means finishing the various work tasks takes a bit longer due to the extra training that takes place for them. Thankfully they have been great learners so far, so maybe soon we will get back to normal.

I never was able to go to the mountains and enjoy the snow… we are now hitting the 80s in temperature and looking at the slopes from my balcony, it seems the snow has almost completely melted. We have also gotten more restrictions and can hardly leave our house yet again. A bit upsetting for sure, but at least the warm temps and daylight savings kicking in means more time to take our dog out and so on.

With the temperatures getting higher and days getting longer, this meant that I have been taking my camera out more often on our walks around the neighborhood. It’s nothing crazy, but being able to capture the various blooming flora and work on my technique has definitely been a positive. With the longer sunlight and the smell of the blooming flowers, my mood has definitely been better on average as a whole as well.


Although largely due to the stimulus checks getting thrown at us, I was able to exceed both my main and stretch investment goals by shoveling an extra $3K into the market. Next month, the target remains the same – $1K on top of my regular retirement contributions, with an additional $1K as a stretch goal. Looking at my cash position, this should definitely happen…

Thankfully, this weekend is a 4-day due to good Friday and Easter. I’m having some coworkers and friends over for 2 out of the 4 days, which I am very much looking forward to. The next couple of weeks will be pretty rough at work due to some internal air-forcey things, but hopefully the last couple of weeks of April will swing back and equalize the month to be pretty good overall.

Dealing with early retirement negativity.

One of my coworkers, a civilian actually, came to Aviano around the same time I did. He is admittedly high on the food chain and got into the federal workforce after getting out as an officer a couple of decades ago. As I was walking through our hallway, I ran into him as he congratulated me on my recent promotion (to E-6). We started talking about our future goals and he started trying to convince me to commission – which isn’t going to happen for a few reasons. We started talking a bit about what my plans are for the future and I mentioned that with my aggressive savings rate and investments, I’m looking forward to not working after I retire from the military and I should be in good shape to do so. His reaction was typical, although a little surprising. He started raising his voice and telling (at) me that I will not be able to retire after the military (especially as enlisted) and I am silly for thinking that it is possible. Even if I monetize a hobby, it will not be enough! I will become bored in retirement and will need to work to keep stimulated. He got so flustered, he actually excused himself from the conversation and hurried back to his office before I can even get a word in.

This happens a lot.

So what to do? I do not particularly believe in withdrawing from all future planning conversations, and in fact I enjoy trying to convince people what IS in fact possible. I like to inspire my troops, peers, and even those above me. Even if people do not want to retire and want to keep working, showing them the possibilities (besides the generic “here is what Johnny would have after 50 years of compound growth” presentation we get) and opening their eyes is a great feeling. Needless to say, shutting down and pretending I am living paycheck to paycheck is something I just am not interested in. While we all have relatively hidden lives and expenses, we literally do wear our paychecks on our sleeves (or now with OCPs, on our chests) so we all are aware roughly of what our financial situation at least COULD be. The more people are comfortable about talking about their numbers and position, the more others can ask questions and we can make our financial lives better across the board.

It is definitely discouraging when you run into people that are so set on this being impossible. I’ll also be honest that once I got home, I went through my spreadsheets JUST IN CASE as I tend to do when I run into these situations. Although this particular person made it quite clear that he is set in his ways about his beliefs, plenty of others are not. If/when other people see these types of exchange, let THEM know that the person who made those assumptions are in fact wrong and show them how. Be better supervisors, peers, or subordinates and try to help everyone in your sphere of influence.

2020, a year in review

I’d like to start off with a little backstory on everything occurred, but if you want to just look at the financial section, scroll down to the bottom!

2020 was not an easy year for anyone, and despite not liking to “one-up” people on suffering, I feel like certain members of the military had it much rougher than the rest of the regular (and especially non-first-responder) public. People got stuck on deployments for extra months, those stationed overseas faced much harsher lock downs than the US, seeing family and friends less due to the imposed commander directed restrictions and many other rules and regulations made this year quite tough despite the mission still having to continue.

I did have to face some of those challenges myself as well, although I saw many others having a rougher time than I did. For a quick summary, I deployed in January for what should have been 6 months. My wife stayed in Italy with the plan of going to visit her family and friends in the spring when the weather got a little nicer. As my extension to stay at Aviano got approved, we decided to look for a house closer to the work place and put in a tenative move out day around the 4th of July, which we picked due to the long weekend, me definitely being home despite the usual 1-2 week extensions, and having nice weather to actually do everything…

Needless to say, none of that happened. I got stuck at my deployment for 8 months. My wife was not even allowed to travel to work for some time due to the restrictions in Italy (as it was one of the hardest hit countries in the beginning), let alone go back to the US. We put in our notice to move just before everything kicked off (we were told Italy requires a 6 months notice to the LL if you don’t want to get hit with fees), so we were still on the hook for that – despite the fact that all PCSes were frozen, so nobody was moving out of their houses. My wife did end up somehow finding a great place with literally days to spare, and moved the entire house on her own (along with a couple people we hired to move the heavier stuff + drive the moving truck).

I got home as everything was coming back to normal. We took a multi-day trip to Florence, a day trip to Venice, and made plans for some more travel. Another couple of weeks later, the cases started rising again and Italy was getting shut down. My wife fell sick (and was tested positive to the virus), so we were both on house arrest for roughly a month. As the holidays came closer, Italy made an additional decree basically prohibiting all travel for the holidays with a ton of restrictions of having people over or going out to someone’s house, so here we are today, about to ring in the New Year by ourselves with some Prosecco and a view of the alps… I did get the “present” of finding out I got promoted, so along with that we still have each other and besides the usual muscle aches, our health, so we’re not complaining too much.

Despite this being an awful year for any kind of mental and social health, 2020 was a GREAT year for our finances, so we try to focus on that when we try and come up with the positives of 2020.

FINANCE REVIEW OF 2020 STARTS HERE

Both of our rent houses were fully rented (and paid for) for the entire year. Although there were some late payments from one of the tenants, both families kept their jobs and did not have any issues making full payments each month. This was the first full year we had no issues from our houses (outside of some minor maintenance)!

My current equity total for both houses is roughly $57K. With COVID going on, we saw many SFHs rise in value in the area. Both houses appreciated by no less than $10K looking at the comparable houses selling in the area. Although I still owe some on the hard money loan for house #2, I would say $47K in my pocket if I sold both now would be more than conservative.

Since we DID have a few issues in our houses in 2019, I still had the lion’s share left to max out into my Roth for FY2019, which I did and maxed out my 2020 contribution with ease. I currently have the 6K ready to go for next year and am waiting for tomorrow to full send that max immediately as well.

At the end of 2019, my Roth IRA was valued at $58,800.05. My balance now is $85,209.91. I did contribute $11K, but my investment there grew by $15,409!

With the deployment, I threw in the max into the TSP (60%) and was set to max it for the first time year – mission accomplished! My TSP last year totaled $35,477.50. My current balance is $69,692.84. So even after the $19.5K max, my investments grew there by $14,715.34.

Overall, my retirement accounts saw a gain of just over $30K,
or almost identical to my actual yearly contribution into them!

In addition to the above, I also added $14,820 into my taxable investments, which now has a total of $25,340.10.

Lastly, with the stimulus hitting Tuesday and paying all my current credit card debt, I have $13,892.03 in my savings, with another grand or so on the way for back pay due to my promotion.

I still have the same ~$3-4K in crypto, and may add to this position during the next pullback since it’s obviously not going anywhere, but this is my lowest priority and seen as a fun gamble over playing options.

Of course, my wife has maxed her Roth IRA for the year and is ready to punch the button on Jan 1 for her account as well. We have started dialogue of having her extra income be put aside for a future downpayment once we PCS again, but for the time being, it is her “fun money” for whatever she chooses to do. Luckily for me, she doesn’t like to waste money either and wants to invest it as much as she can past her personal emergency fund. As usual, I do not count her money in my calculations.

In late June, I posted about having a liquid NW of over $100K. Today, I have a liquid NW of over $200K. Adding in my house equity and my semi-collectable car (value has been steadily rising on Bring a Trailer auctions!) my overall NW jumps to roughly $275K.

I got to Aviano with the goal of adding $100K to my overall NW and have nearly doubled that. My new goal for the next 4 years is to get to $500K, which after that should easily get me to $1MM by retirement time (given similar levels of contributions and even at just a 7% market rise), which should have me sitting on (at the least) chubby FIRE after factoring in my pension and VA.

Hope you all have a great 2021!

On being grateful and being able to support causes.

It is about that time of year where the CFC campaign is starting up, we are bombarded with feel-good holiday movies, and are being preached to “give thanks” and be charitable for those that have less. A few years ago, I would donate here and there to some causes dear to my heart, but in the back of my mind I was always a little stingy and had the belief that it may be best to continue to accumulate wealth now, but give later when I can give more. This mentality was challenged and ultimately overturned during this season a few years ago.

Being Russian, my family never celebrated traditional thanksgiving while I was growing up. Being married to my wife now, who is largely traditional with the holidays and seeing how important it is in general for many Americans, I have largely changed my view on the holiday that was previously just known as “4-5 free days off!”. My first year at Aviano, I hosted thanksgiving for my shop that all of the junior enlisted showed up to. It was a headache – especially for my wife who did 75%+ of the cooking – to put together a meal for 10+ people, but it felt pretty great to make sure my folks did not feel forgotten or ignored. The next year I just recently came home from a deployment, moved shops where there were only NCOs, and my wife and I ultimately decided to take it easy with the cooking. After thanksgiving, we found out that two people living in the dorms on base committed suicide over the weekend due to being alone which, even though nobody was part of my squadron, hit us pretty hard and was the catalyst in making me take on a more charitable mindset both financially, and temporally.

Now, hopefully if you are reading this blog, you are in at least decent financial shape. We have all seen the countless ads/sound bites that most people live paycheck to paycheck and unfortunately that is the truth, especially with how COVID has decimated certain economies. I challenge you to take initiative and help without judgement to at least someone inside or near your circle if you do not give already. For example, a friend of my wife’s was getting short on funds as she works in a heavily impacted COVID industry and had a situation where she was unable to contact a family member due to the cost involved. My wife transferred her $200 with no obligation to pay us back and the kindness we were able to afford brought my wife’s friend to tears. We also ran across a dog in a nearby community that was involved in a hit and run and required surgery and antibiotics during the thanksgiving weekend. We gave 80 euros to support a go fund me the current caretaker posted and got a private response seconds later asking if the extra 0 was in error and if we were sure we wanted to donate that much. We were in shock… 80 euros is THAT much?

Overall, as we build OUR lives and save to maintain that QOL, try to acknowledge that the stability of the military and federal employment puts us in a much more fortunate position than others and consider putting some funds aside to help those that are less fortunate. While donating thousands or more later may seem more impactful than donating a couple hundred now, that couple hundred now does make an immediate and huge difference.

More COVID, more problems… but not financial ones!

Or alternatively – FIND YOUR BASELINE

COVID is once again putting a strain on the world with something happening nearly everywhere like curfew, border lockdowns, restaurant restrictions, and even messing with store hours! Besides the secondary effects, more cases means a much higher chance of infection for everyone around to include you and me. My wife, for example, just recovered from COVID herself this past weekend and during the time she was sick, we ultimately had to spend upwards of three weeks in isolation from the world where we were not allowed to leave the house. Thankfully we had an awesome support system that was able to deliver us food, medicine, and anything else we needed, but boy was it a tough time for me who was fortunate enough NOT to catch it by the end.

Believe me, as much fun as it may sound like to do nothing for 3 weeks, there are only so many things to do within the four walls you call home if you’re not prepared for it. I worked on more unpacking/organizing, played some video games, worked on a few hobbies, and even went down the rabbit hole to watch just about every b-rated movie that was relevant to my interests, and still had a week to go…

Of course, the point of this blog is primarily finances, so I’ll switch over to that subject before wrapping up with more life musings.

As someone who missed the first COVID wave due to a deployment, it was staggering to see that even in the home environment how little spending was actually needed to survive.
$0 in gas
$0 in travel
$0 in souvenirs
$0 in restaurants
$0 in car payments since all of our cars are paid off – or alternatively, $0 in car repairs.
All we had was a slight uptick of our utilities since we were at home 24/7, a slight uptick in groceries, the rent for the house, and of course the insurance costs for our cars (which are not really required to survive, but of course we need to keep them for work) as our only expenses.

Because we had more time, I was able to experiment more with meals, bringing some new staples to our house recipes we’ll be using in the future so we don’t get too bored from eating at home, further reducing our “I don’t feel like cooking because I’m bored of the stuff we make, let’s go get dinner somewhere instead” whims.

Due to the above, nearly my entire paycheck this month went in my pocket and into various investments.

Now, I definitely do not mean that everyone should live a nomadic/hermit lifestyle where all you do is scrape by to survive, but this was simply a great reference point to actually gauge the hedonistic treadmill just about all of us are on to some degree. While I often hypothesize a basic budget on what I need from past data, I usually add arbitrary spending and thoughts like “hmm, yeah I guess I spend $XX/mo on booze, and I will probably need to spend $YY on these hobbies” but this “exercise” was much more definitive and showed the actual baseline of my spending habits.

This baseline is just that – a baseline. What you TRULY NEED vs the various WANTS we have in life.

Coincidentally, after being at home for 3 weeks straight with a dog, the constant cleaning and sweeping led us to WANT a Roomba. Now, since time is again precious due to having work hour requirements, we will be purchasing one within the next couple of weeks.

Furthermore, I also was able to pin point things that make me happy, as I had plenty of time to self-reflect and see how staying at home really is. There are a lot of things that I SUSPECTED I needed, but now there is a definite list of things that I KNOW I need for fulfilment.

I know that video games and the few indoor hobbies I have now is not enough, but I know they are things I enjoy. The first day off quarantine, I went on an impromptu photo shoot of my friend’s new car and finished it off with a spirited drive through the mountains and enjoyed every second. I look at the alps now and see that we finally got some snow this morning, which means I’ll be able to go out and do some runs on my board any day now. I know that our dog was absolutely a god send during this time for both me and my wife to get some companionship (as we were unable to hang out together due to trying [and succeeding] to not get me sick) so I will always want at least one in my life as long as I can give them a good life. I know that I want to start getting my miniature models I picked up last year painted and was able to dig them out, so I’m sure I will find time to start doing that soon as well. I know that I am interested in wood working and have always enjoyed doing it when I get the chance to, so I am making a budget to build a shop once I get back to the states and/or find a permanent place to live. I know that traveling and experiencing food brings my wife and I great joy and is something we missed during those three weeks, so we will definitely keep allotting money to that budget. I also know that I still very much enjoy beer and scotch, so that budget remains unchanged as well!

I also know that some of these hobbies are not the cheapest, and I am not the kind of guy that wants the minimums. I always aim for the price point that will get me the best return. This means that my current camera setup costs more than some peoples cars, but this gives me much better pictures than my old setup which also allows me more creative freedom while editing, and much better results out of the box. While I know I do not need a Ferrari since I do not have the skills or the roads allowed to me to push it to the limit, I will not be satisfied with a base Corolla. I already know that I will not want to use a Harbor Freight table saw and would rather spend more on something like a Stop Saw because I value my limbs over saving a few bucks. I know that while I do not need to stay at the Waldorf while traveling, I am NOT content with sharing a bathroom at some bed and breakfast/hostel type of place.

Most importantly, I KNOW that I did not regret for a second NOT being at work. While at times I was bored enough to go into work to break up the monotony of being on house arrest, I never actually cared about what projects my team was working on, or what I might be missing.

I also now know my actual baseline, and, that if push came to shove, what I have now and what I have to have to survive is something that I will easily be able to afford. Further investing in myself and my hobbies will make it much easier to prevent “burnout” from being stuck inside the house if it comes up again in the future and a full range of those hobbies (outside the house included) will definitely leave me fulfilled fulltime.

Next month I will break down my overall finances for the year, how I did vs what I hoped for, and what my plans for next year are.

The hidden benefits of constantly applying for credit cards – catching identity fraud!

It has now been a little over a month since I got back from my deployment and it has been GREAT!  With that, I wanted to take some time to go over what we’ve done and some financial “nuggets” to share.  Of course, I had that stereotypical “burning a hole in my pocket” purchase – a Nikon D850 along with a few lenses and accessories and I do not regret it for a second.  The camera was also used in conjunction to hit my minimum spending on a new credit card, which will segue into the main point of this article in just a few sentences…

Although I could have done with a cheaper set-up, the fact that this did cost as much as it did makes me push myself even harder to get out and make sure it is being used.  It is far more difficult to make excuses to myself and forego the opportunities to leave the house and travel around.  Not just the historical/popular tourism areas (although we definitely have been doing that), but also going off the beaten path up one-lane, but two-way roads, various lakes, caves, and so on.  Definitely part of that “build the life you want and then save to maintain it” mantra that I cling to.  As an added bonus, most of those areas are dog friendly, so our pup has been enjoying the journeys as well! Here he is being his goofy, adorable self:

Getting back on the title’s topic, getting that minimum spending was the primary target for us so we can load up on another credit card and have that as the answer to “how can you guys afford to travel so much?” As we reached that spending with my new card, we wanted to open up the same card, but this time in my wife’s name.  Surprisingly, she was denied.  They annoyingly did not want to give us a reason at first and we were very curious as she got both a CSR and an AMEX plat earlier this year, so we knew her credit score and our household income should have been more than good enough.

After calling back, sitting on hold, and getting transferred numerous times, we found out that it was due to her credit history.  Apparently, she had a loan opened in her name earlier in the year just as COVID hit and have since defaulted on it.  In addition, these people assholes registered her name and social with Experian and Equifax themselves in attempts to prevent her from getting her credit discrepancy fixed, locking down her social, and just overall getting all this taken care of.

Unfortunately for us, the previous credit cards she was approved for were opened just before that loan was taken out so we never did see it on her hard pull credit reports.  All of the score reporting we had through the credit card companies are still not showing the delinquency – although they did show the hard pulls and new accounts opened (which we thought were just due to the credit card applications). 

FORTUNATELY for us, it has only been a few months, so while the damage is definitely there, it is not as extensive as it could have been and we were able to catch it early so we can begin the long process of getting it all repaired.

Overall, this is yet another, albeit VERY unconventional positive of playing the credit card game.  If we kept with just our regular cards, who knows when we would have noticed this, and it could have severely screwed us over when we went back stateside with things like vehicle, or house loans. Hopefully we can get this taken care of soon and get back to hitting minimum spending targets yet again to get the full advantage of all the various credit cards we can.

Obviously the title is a bit tongue-in-cheek.

Finding out that your identity was stolen because of a credit card application is definitely not a usual perk. We definitely got lucky with the timing, both from when we found out about this as well as our current geographical position.

Most importantly, take the following message to heart:

Military members give out their social on nearly a daily basis. Whether it’s plugging it into various forms online, at the doctor, or through phone calls, the amount of times I’ve recited my social is something I lost count many YEARS ago. Data breaches happen, and they happen OFTEN.

YOU CAN STAY SAFE(R) BY FOLLOWING THESE TIPS:

  1. Check your credit reports every 4 months through http://www.annualcreditreport.com – you are entitled to 3 credit reports for free every year. Space it out so you can get a good look of what’s going on.
  2. Every time you apply for a credit card or loan with banks that do a hard pull are mandated to give you the option of getting a copy of that credit report. Always opt in to fill any gaps, or the space out he credit report you are getting through the website above.
  3. Register through the big bureaus (Equifax, Transunion, Experian) so nobody can create secondary accounts without jumping through some serious hoops.
  4. After you register, I suggest a lock on your credit so new applications get denied. You have to manually unlock it for your own loans, so it is a little bit of a headache, but overall well worth it.

Updates, updates, updates…

No, I am not talking about getting kicked off your work computer for the third time today to install some new windows nonsense. I’m talking about ME! It’s been… let us see — roughly TWO years since my last confession? That is definitely my bad.

What can I say? Life happens and we forget about certain things for a while until it is no longer a habit to do them. I will skip the finer details, but overall it has been an interesting 2 years. I ended up hitting my 9 year mark and had another re-enlistment, a forward nod to do an IPCOT for another 4 years of OCONUS fun, another surgery, another (current) deployment… and a slew of other good and bad things in between. It is definitely true what they say — the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Since you are here for financial reasons, I suppose updates on that front are the most wanted! I think a good starting point / look back is my “new year resolution” post back from 2018, just to keep me honest.

Continue with 10% TSP contributions — Since my trip to Afghanistan in 2017 (good food, not so good people, not sure if recommend), I have actually upped and kept my TSP percentage at 30% for all of 2018 AND 2019. This year, I have set it to 60% and have not looked back. New goal is to max it EVERY YEAR until retirement.

Max ROTH IRAs for myself and the wife – This one was a little trickier with the additional 20% (and now additional 50%) going to the TSP, but we managed it. My wife was able to start working, but I did have to take some money out of my taxable investments to max out both of our IRAs. Those funds have been replaced and my wife has already been able to max out her IRA account for the 2020 tax year while I still have $4K left to go this tax year.

Save enough to purchase an additional investment property to rent out (~25k on a purchase price of 120k) – Not quite. We had a lot of headaches with our two houses. Fence replacement, repainting, loss of tenants, firing of my previous PM company, mold issues, and HVAC duct replacement as well as some additional maintenance. Not overly pleased, but it seems like we are finally on the right track. With this whole COVID thing (more on that later), I am looking forward to getting house #3 in the next year as the economic outlook seems potentially grim for most markets in the near future.

After the above is met, raise TSP to 30% or more. – addressed in point 1.

I wouldn’t give myself an A+ for 2019, but I do feel great going on 2020. I will go ahead and dive into a bit more of my personal numbers for transparency, motivation, or whatever else.

Cash position – I currently have roughly $6K in cash. Everything over this amount has been invested monthly, either additionally into my Roth IRA or a taxable account.

REMEMBER – time IN the market, beats TIMING the market.

In my Roth IRA, I have an additional $62.5K.

Taxable investments total of $12K.

Roth TSP total of $42.8K.

My crypto gamble hasn’t done great, but I have roughly $3K in there as well and is just staying put unless I do have to take it out for some emergency.

I am now happy to say that not only do I have over $100K in total ASSETS (as I calculated in that New Year’s post), but I now have over $100K in LIQUID investments – NOT counting my wife’s Roth IRA portfolio.

A W E S O M E

In addition, my enthusiast car that is in storage at my HOR (not to be confused with my current duty station) has been seeing prices north of $18K for similar mileage/condition models selling on various sales and auction sites.

Finally, the two rent homes now have a combined equity of just over $53K.

My 2020 financial plans include finishing maxing my IRA ($4K), max out the TSP around November (~$9K left [as my 60% started in March]) add some individual stocks to the tune of an additional $4K, and finally, put aside that ~$25K for house #3 within a year – IF the numbers make sense.

On expecting more from ourselves.

I was driving to work the other day and decided to give a re-listen to the newest Rise Against album.  In the album, there’s a particular song that caught my ears, lyrically – Miracle.  While they aren’t exactly singing about FI, the concepts can be applicable across the board to so many different things.  In particular, the following few lines:


Are you gonna wait here for a sign to let you know now?
Are you gonna sit there paralyzed by what you’ve seen?
Or are you gonna finally grip the wheel?  I think you know how
This is more than you expected it to be

Don’t wait for a miracle
To tumble from the sky
To part the seas around you
Or turn water into wine
Don’t wait for a miracle
The world is passing by
The walls that will surround you
Are only in your mind

When the weights we carry breaks us, we’re tempted to stay down
But every road to recovery starts at the breakdown


Pretty good stuff.  This resonates a lot with my personal philosophy and especially when it comes to money.  So many people go by their financial lives without really ever realizing that they may be in trouble or are, in general, not setting themselves up for success.  I ended up having a long conversation between another couple of NCOs in regards to one of their shopping habits that same day and kept going back to the song.  This NCO in particular was feeling pretty bogged down.  She talked about wanting to change her habit and get in a better financial place, but as we continued the conversation, it started to seem just like lip service until it finally clicked.

It all started with saying she could not afford to do certain activities because she was always broke.  When pressed, she confessed that she uses shopping as a coping tool of sorts and needs to do it.  Turned out she had dresses for just about every occasion.  Tops to match every bottom and bottoms to match every top.  Add in shoes for all occasions and make sure you do not forget all the accessories!

A few minutes later and after doing some very quick math with fairly small price points of purchase, we estimated her clothing collection was worth about $10,000.  You read that right.  Ten thousand dollars.  Of clothing.  She does not know how to save because she never did.  Now, she admits that it is difficult for her to break that mindset and stop going out shopping, or even imagine why she would NOT need a different dress for every day of summer (while we’re in uniform 90% of the time anyways.) 

But, just as the lyrics say, don’t wait for a miracle and get on that road to recovery no matter at how low of a point you are in.  If you spend $1,000 on something every month that you don’t really need, drop it down to 800 and save the extra 200.  If you feel that didn’t impact you much, change it to 500/500.  I am not saying to cut out all your desires, but make sure you keep a balance in life, and your checkbook.  I know this is a trend in my post, but it honestly is the biggest thing of being financially successful.  Start early.  If you could not start yesterday, start today.  Try to limit the delay as much as possible.

-Art