Financial Hot Water Tips

Recently I was reading a really scary story: It was all about the huge costs if your water heater tank fails.

Some other Financial websites also have cooked up some hot water articles worth perusing.

Michael James on Money discovered he had a fountain in his house: Too bad the water was shooting out of the top of his water heater tank!

Big Cajun Man mentioned why his faulty water heater was actually a good thing in this Earth Day post.

Boomer and Echo saved on home insurance by upgrading items including their water heater.

Some RedFlagDeal members chat about tankless water heaters.

Sarah on Timeless Finance described how her tenants from the hot place cost her the big bucks by not telling anyone when “the rental water heater cracked open.”

Ellen Roseman tackles the perennial topic of abuses by sales staff pushing water heater sales door to door in two articles at the Star http://www.thestar.com/business/personal_finance/spending_saving/2013/04/12/water_heater_sales_at_the_door_set_for_clampdown_roseman.html and http://www.thestar.com/news/queenspark/2013/04/11/ontario_cracks_down_on_doortodoor_water_heater_sales.html .

Happy weekend! And may the only hot water you experience be the lovely warm stuff in the lake or pool in which you go swimming.

I’m Rich; Are You?

One thing I’ve discovered by asking is that most people define “rich” as someone one or two steps higher up the annual income ladder than themselves.

When I say we are rich and so are they, many of them disagree. Yet the people I mean are living in single family detached homes that are between half to entirely paid off. They live within walking distance of 4 grocery stores, 2 medical clinics, 3 dental clinics and a library. They all own at least one vehicle, most own two. [One owns two, but doesn’t count the red convertible because “it’s always breaking down.”] They all have some form of health and dental insurance. They all have some form of pension or RRSP savings. Their children are all enrolled in a sport or activity (like piano lessons) that costs money. At least one partner in each home is employed full time. To me, they and we are all rich. Our lifestyle is what most Canadians dream of and aspire to have. Personally, I feel grateful and thankful for being rich. And my family tries to give back both monetarily and with our time to help others because being rich comes with responsibilities.

While it’s easy to get agreement that Bill Gates and Warren Buffet are rich that’s about where the consensus ends.

How do you define rich?

Do you have to make over $100,000/year to be rich? $200,000? Are you rich now? Or has what is “rich” risen as you have moved up?

Other people have also wondered and discussed richness recently.

Jane at the Money Puzzle describes three millionaires she knows but seems doubtful whether the third one is really rich.

In Baby, You’re a Rich Man, The Wall Street Journal tried to decide how rich is rich with respect to changes in US personal taxes.

Adina at Timeless Finance “shares her scale from Destitute to Out of Sight.” I’d never really thought just how rich is RICH before reading her analysis.

Caroline McClatchey of BBC News Magazine examines “The rich: Exactly what does the terminology mean?” and introduced me to the concept of Banker Bashing.  Strangely enough MERs did not enter the definition.

Big Cajun Man offers a Simple Tip to becoming rich and explores a technological marvel from the late 1990s (animated GIFs).  Ah, I remember my first animated dolphin….

Mark at My Own Advisor is on his way to rich-dom if he’s not already there, as shown in his May 2013 Dividend Income Update.

Someone on Yahoo! Answers made the question even trickier by asking “Am I rich or just wealthy?”  I never even thought whether there’s a difference. Is there?

I’d say probably if you have to ask whether you are rich, the answer is Yes.

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