As I’ve mentioned in my first article I amassed around $35,000 of student debt to pay for my college education. Fortunately, I was able to start an engineering job with a $71,000 salary two months after I left the university in the same city, which has a lower-than-average cost of living. And within the first month of being employed Kubo Queen and I received a windfall of $10,000 (before taxes), which we put all to use towards my student debt. From there, I elected to pay my student loans, whenever possible, $3,000 per month.
I’ve always been impressed by people who possessed great skills*, or were pursuing things that would reward them with great skills. The ones acquired from years of studying a serious hobby like drawing or bread baking. This is why whenever I meet someone new I always ask them what they do for fun — how they spend their free time**. Their answers usually reveal whether they have (or will have) great skills or not. If I think they are doing something worth pursuing I tend to find myself imagining what it would be like if I were doing it too. I imagine the new skills I would have as a result of doing the activity, and it puts a warm smile on my face and gives me a strong sense of bliss. In general, pursuing and acquiring new skills (and, hence, new knowledge) have always made me a lot happier than buying and owning material things.
I hope you had a great Thanksgiving, and I hope my previous article about it inspired you in being more aware of how you spend your time with family and friends. Today we return to my Kubo King’s Thoughts On College Education series with part 3 (see part 1 and part 2). This will be the second to last article in the series, meaning there will be one last part posted next. Anyway, this article focuses on main strategies for cutting the cost of college education down. So read on!
Two years ago, the year 2016, the percentage of high school graduates who headed off to college was around 70% [1]. Some of them may have had clear goals, plans, and expectations from higher education, and had thought out good strategies for tackling the financial burden it would place on them after graduation. However, I suspect that a large number of them did not have such things, and were only there because they were instructed to be there — to be successful in life. They get to universities with no real plans and no real goals, only armed with the hope that their lives will be better if they study some kind of field and receive some kind of degree. The fortunate ones, like me, end up figuring it out on their own, while the unfortunate ones do not. But, that is why this article exists. I want to help people like you who are unsure about college and do not have parental subsidies to fund a, sometimes hedonistic, college lifestyle.
We are taking a break from the Kubo King’s Thoughts On College Education series (part 1 and part 2) to welcome the upcoming Thanksgiving Day. In this article, Kubo King shares his first ever experience with Thanksgiving and Black Friday, and how he and Kubo Queen are spending this year’s Thanksgiving and the days that follow it. It’s a pretty heavy article full of fun and reflection. What are you waiting for? Read on!
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My very first Thanksgiving was in the year 2001. I was eleven years old, and my family had just immigrated to America in July of that year. At the time, I didn’t really know what it was all about, but I remember looking forward to it because it became obvious that my relatives were going to prepare a feast to celebrate it. I’ve always liked eating, and I’ve always looked forward to birthdays, Christmas, and New Year’s largely for that reason as a young child. So from then on Thanksgiving became another event that I would anticipate each year.