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Thread: Good news
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27th September 2012, 07:55 PM #1
Good news
After a the last year of bad news and bad health, finally some good news.
I'VE PAID OFF OUT HOUSE. Yipeee!!!!!!
I just had to tell someone.
RobertCheck my facebook:rhbtimber
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27th September 2012, 07:56 PM #2
Good Stuff
Cheers
DJ
ADMIN
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27th September 2012, 08:04 PM #3
That is just the best feeling and gives one security.
I just cannot understand the current trend to keep piling more debt on one's mortgage.
Well done
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27th September 2012, 10:33 PM #4Member
- Join Date
- Mar 2004
- Location
- Montville
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- 0
Goodonya mate. Its worth shouting out about.
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27th September 2012, 10:55 PM #5
It must be a fairly fancy out house if you took out a mortgage on it!
I once had a dunny at the bottom of the garden with a gold-plated seat which was nicked from a hotel, so the overall value of the establishment still wasn't more than a few quid..
I know you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I'm not sure you realize that what you just read is not what I meant.
Regards, Woodwould.
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28th September 2012, 12:40 PM #6Skwair2rownd
- Join Date
- Nov 2007
- Location
- Dundowran Beach
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- 77
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- 0
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28th September 2012, 01:00 PM #7
Isn't that just the best feeling?
Cheers
SAISAYEvery day is better than yesterday
Cheers
SAISAY
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28th September 2012, 01:22 PM #8GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Aug 2005
- Location
- Queensland
- Posts
- 613
Congrats - not an easy task especially in the current climate.
If you can, if only for a brief time, continue to save the normal repayment. When you then make some major purchase - cash talks loudly.
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28th September 2012, 03:15 PM #9SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Dec 2010
- Location
- Melbourne
- Age
- 80
- Posts
- 36
Good on you!!! It would be interesting to know after a year or so how your decisions in life have changed after being free of that debt?
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29th September 2012, 11:39 PM #10GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Jun 2005
- Location
- Helensburgh
- Posts
- 608
If I were in that position today I would salary sacrifice that same amount of money, it would be a far better investment than any house. When we dropped out of private health insurance many years ago we saved that same amount and I couldn't believe how quickly it accumulated.
CHRIS
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30th September 2012, 09:44 PM #11
Thanks guys, it's taken me a few days to get my head around the fact that I don't have to scrimp and save to pay the mortgage, for the last year we have been putting every cent into the loan because my wife is possibly on the qld cut list, so we needed to get out of one of our debts, and we had a tax return windfall that allowed us the luxury of paying it off 2 months earlier than we thought.
I just cannot understand the current trend to keep piling more debt on one's mortgage.
Woodwould
It must be a fairly fancy out house if you took out a mortgage on it!
I once had a dunny at the bottom of the garden with a gold-plated seat which was nicked from a hotel, so the overall value of the establishment still wasn't more than a few quid.
Bob38S
Congrats - not an easy task especially in the current climate.
If you can, if only for a brief time, continue to save the normal repayment. When you then make some major purchase - cash talks loudly.
Chris Parks
If I were in that position today I would salary sacrifice that same amount of money,
RobertCheck my facebook:rhbtimber
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