[NEET LYFE] Avenues for living without having to work (7)

1 Name: Anonymous : 2018-03-05 02:26 ID:vUa9e/wz

As I've been learning these past few years, work SUCKS! If there's any hikkiNEETs on this board, could you please brief me on the viability of this lifestyle? I live very frugally, and have survived (albeit very unhealthily) on bread and water and could deal with worse if need be. I do this all so I can sink more funds into my computer. However, no matter how cheaply I live, without work I won't be able to pay indefinitely for my apartment.

What can I do about this? I'm surely eligible for NEETbucks from the government, but I refuse to throw away my dignity like that. My parents would definitely accommodate me until the day I die, but I don't want to inconvenience them (they're already taking care of one NEET, after all). Could I room up and split my funds with some other slightly more respectable individual? How do you find somebody like that?

2 Name: Anonymous : 2018-03-05 15:57 ID:JkWccIZQ

If you sign up,
You can earn $1,000,000 too.
http://goo.gl/YLysV3

3 Name: Anonymous : 2018-03-06 03:27 ID:My4jTq50

I learned to become an investor and now it is not necessary for me to work to live. In the years before being completely financially secure, I worked hard at my job to raise investment capital to invest. Now as an investor, I spend my time choosing business ventures to where I lend my money and they pay me a return on my loans.

4 Name: Anonymous : 2018-03-08 12:24 ID:Heaven

Did you earn $1,000,000 too?

5 Name: Anonymous : 2018-03-09 03:07 ID:My4jTq50

>>4
I haven't reached the point where I'm earning one million dollars in revenue within a 12 month period. If that was a goal that I wanted to reach, I could plan for that in four years i.e. for 2022.

7 Name: Anonymous : 2018-03-12 07:15 ID:Heaven

I knew a mechanic from Ecuador at this local car rental place whose owner I did odd gofer jobs for. Anyway, he had a plan to become financially self-sufficient in 15 years by buying an apartment building down there, and slowly paying it off, it cost ~$100,000 USD. Not a bad idea, since Ecuador uses the United States Dollar as their currency, so no need for currency conversion. It's definitely something I'd do, if I won a small lottery, or inherited a decent amount of money.

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