My 15 WORST Purchases I've Made (things I wish I didn’t buy in my 30s)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025

Комментарии • 69

  • @tarynmaria_
    @tarynmaria_  9 месяцев назад +1

    My 15 worst purchases of my 30s! Also, head to thrivemarket.com/TarynMaria to get 30% off your first order + a free gift worth up to $60! In addition to my 30% off discount, Thrive is running a sale on bars & snacks this week (I stocked up!) - this is a great time to sign up & check out Thrive Market for yourself!
    Click here for a clean & tidy home! www.youtube.com/@tarynmaria_?sub_confirmation=1
    Join my mailing list for emails that will make your life easier! eepurl.com/iB2aE2

  • @SusuWorld-dy3pq
    @SusuWorld-dy3pq 9 месяцев назад +37

    I have to agree about the expensive vacations with small children. When my nieces were 4 and 6 years old I took them to Disney World. I paid for the air fare, staying at a Disney property, meals, souvenirs. They're in their 30s now, and the only thing they remember is that I allowed them to eat pizza on the bed. They would have had just as much fun at a local hotel with a pool, and I would have saved a lot of money.

    • @gwenj5419
      @gwenj5419 9 месяцев назад +7

      I remember taking our kids on a trip to a beach city and all they wanted to do was swim in the hotel pool. We could have stayed at a hotel in our own town and done that. Lol

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +2

      Oh my gosh - yes!!!

    • @allein1001
      @allein1001 8 месяцев назад +3

      My dad insists I've been to Disney World. I say it doesn't count if I wasn't old enough to remember. (He says I was two.)

    • @francoiselafferty-hancock5112
      @francoiselafferty-hancock5112 8 месяцев назад +2

      I was 10 when I went. I remember most of it. I'm 47 now. We're waiting to take my son when he's 10.

    • @Hyacinth4368
      @Hyacinth4368 8 месяцев назад +4

      Children under 8 years old won't have clear memories of special trips. Think of yourself; I know that I have very few memories of early childhood.

  • @JamieM470
    @JamieM470 9 месяцев назад +35

    I agree 100% on everything but the house. We bought a modest house in 1995, and my husband got really sick and has not been able to work since 2004.
    We tried for a long time to get disability benefits for him, but that was denied over and over. We found out too late that our lawyer was awful, and that once you've had a disability lawyer, no other lawyer in the US will take your case. My (over 20 yrs) career was shipped to India, so I've been working manual labor jobs to support us since then, and it was a struggle but I finally managed to pay off the house.
    If we had chosen a house that was any more expensive than this one, I wouldn't have been able to afford the house note (and everything else) by myself, and we would have lost our home.
    All this to say: Never go into debt on a major purchase that you wouldn't be able to afford if something happened and you had to survive on one paycheck.
    There are no guarantees about what will happen tomorrow. Hope for the best, but don't place a big bet on it.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +3

      That is a great reminder - thank you for sharing! You do never know what is going to happen.

    • @defaulthuman01
      @defaulthuman01 8 месяцев назад +5

      A thousand times yes! You never know what will happen with income (for either person). You can always "move up", but being saddled with an aspirational debt can be life-devastating if something happens.
      My folks bought thier house along the rationale described in the video. They were fortunate and the income did indeed go up for them, but that still takes *time*. The choice to 'house-up' ended up placing constraints on our childhoods that wouldn't have been present if they had bought the house they could have easily afforded at the time.
      We would have stepped 'down' in school district, but it would have freed up money for more extracurricular and social engagement options.

    • @susansweat9125
      @susansweat9125 8 месяцев назад +2

      This is an excellent reminder of why you need a disability insurance policy of your own ( and read the fine print). Soc.Security disability can be difficult to get.
      An individual is 6 times more likely to become disabled before age 65 than to die before 65.

    • @charleedell92
      @charleedell92 8 месяцев назад +5

      Same, I became disabled at 34 just after buying a house with my husband. It's been a struggle but we have been able to keep it due to longstanding frugal habits and a lump sum but I will be forever thankful that we didn't bank on future income that isn't guaranteed.

    • @giraffezebra2698
      @giraffezebra2698 14 дней назад

      Also property taxes can skyrocket. Mine tripled in 5 years.

  • @AZHITW
    @AZHITW 9 месяцев назад +19

    I bought a solid oak dining table with wheat back chairs 40+ years ago, I loved them then and I love them now. I recently read that oak was out of style, and I have to say I've never had anyone sit at my table and say, "I can't eat on this table it's oak." LOL!

    • @mom2artists
      @mom2artists 9 месяцев назад +2

      Oak will be back in style in 10 years, lol

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +4

      Oak out of style?! Crazy! Your table sounds perfect.

    • @ybrynecho2368
      @ybrynecho2368 8 месяцев назад +3

      We have a wooden table as well. In the 50s the trend was those chrome and Formica sets. My dad refused to have one because he said they looked cheap. In the 50s & 60s we had an old wooden table, that was replaced in the 70s by a teak that my niece now has.

    • @PC-dc1kv
      @PC-dc1kv 8 месяцев назад +2

      I don’t care about what’s in style. If I like it, I like it and that’s ok with me. I have a round oak table that’s over 50 years old and I love it!

    • @ybrynecho2368
      @ybrynecho2368 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@PC-dc1kv As do I.

  • @donnav
    @donnav 8 месяцев назад +8

    As a woman in her mid50’s I agree with nearly all of these especially expensive vacations with kids, cheap knives and too many work clothes. I have to agree with another commenter about house purchase though. We bought our house 26 years ago and our household income has essentially doubled in that time. Yes we likely could have extended ourselves but we haven’t had a mortgage in at least five years and we also own a second property as well, no loans. We have been able to pay off cars, take multiple expensive vacations. I never wanted to be “house poor”, that is..tie all our money up in having a house. But not everyone feels this way and that’s totally ok too. “You do you” as they say 😊

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад

      Thank you so much for sharing!! 😊

  • @irenehabes-quene2839
    @irenehabes-quene2839 8 месяцев назад +4

    Just the wedding cake? You can save tons of money on the entire wedding by thinking sensible about what it is really all about.

  • @woollab
    @woollab 8 месяцев назад +3

    We moved from Montana but kept the house there and rented it out and paid a rental manager. Property values were steadily rising while we lived there and I knew we would never be able to move back if housing was too expensive. 23 years later we decided to sell it (we decided to retire in TN) and we made three times what we paid for it, and the rent we had charged paid off the house. So if it’s a good location that’s growing, property is a good investment.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад

      Thank you for sharing!

  • @TheWoodburningWarrior
    @TheWoodburningWarrior 9 месяцев назад +11

    Totally agree about the knives. Not connected with the fact that I'm a wood carver LOL but when my husband and I were stationed in Germany I bought a very expensive Heinkle knife set and it has lasted me since 2004. They just need sharpened once in awhile and that's easy to do.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  9 месяцев назад +3

      Yes! The BEST knives, in my opinion :)

    • @tracyannmahoney6482
      @tracyannmahoney6482 9 месяцев назад +3

      I've had my Henckels (Solingen, Germany) since the early nineties! I would trade them for nothing!

  • @susansweat9125
    @susansweat9125 8 месяцев назад +5

    I live in Florida and I can't tell you how many times I've seen parents with young children @ Disney W where the kids are screaming and the parents are too ( out of frustration). It's as if the parents are saying " I spent $$$ on this trip and you're going have fun whether you want to or not".
    Honestly, watching probably hundreds of families over the years, taking a child less than 3 or 4 is a complete waste of $. By that age, they'll enjoy it, but they probably won't remember it.
    While we're on the subject of theme parks, Universal is way more intense than Disney and I'd never take a child under 9 or 10. Taking a 3 yr old to Universal is a recipe for misery.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +1

      For sure! I have also seen the miserable kids at Disney - it sounds like such a fun, magical idea but...!

  • @andreagardner2335
    @andreagardner2335 8 месяцев назад +6

    Wrong about the house. Job loss, illness, any number of issues can cause a loss of income. You never want to put the roof over your head at risk because you want to extend yourself on a more expensive house.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад

      Thank you for sharing!

  • @HannahRainbow88
    @HannahRainbow88 8 месяцев назад +4

    I completely agree about the wedding cake (I made ours as we had a small, quirky wedding 😂) and the cheap stroller 🥴 ... Thankfully I got a used (but very good condition) Maclaren toddler's pushchair from FB market for only like £20, to replace the nightmare cheap one before with its tiny, impractical wheels! I've already offered the Maclaren to my sister in law, once our nephew is big enough to not need his full-on baby pram any more.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +1

      What a great Facebook Marketplace find!

    • @francoiselafferty-hancock5112
      @francoiselafferty-hancock5112 8 месяцев назад +1

      I got married 20 years ago. The cake in the city I lived in was going to be $1,000. Buying from my home town it was $300 and my parents brought it over. I was able to customise to exactly what I wanted and it was amazing!!! It looked way better than the city one.

  • @whitneycloud9419
    @whitneycloud9419 9 месяцев назад +4

    Great ideas! I lived like the 'average' American for many years, and now have so much stuff! Like you, I bought some of it, inherited some of it, etc. and now it's time for a lot of it to go away. But I'm not as young as I used to be, so moving all these things around isn't easy. Much better to keep it from coming in before it becomes a problem! 🌺

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +1

      For sure! Thank you for sharing! :)

  • @lillianbarker4292
    @lillianbarker4292 8 месяцев назад +2

    I agree about children’s clothes except that since we only had one, I should have bought a few really cute things while he was little. Kids quickly start choosing their clothes and I encourage that because my mother never gave me choices.

  • @ybrynecho2368
    @ybrynecho2368 8 месяцев назад +2

    Happily we had a country wedding, and our cake was made by a local lady who made wedding cakes for the local brides as her gift. It was 3 layers and I purchased the topper myself. As kiddies we wore a lot of rummage sale clothes and a lot of our clothes went to the rummage sale. I do my workout using an on-line programme of chair exercises for seniors. It helps you do enough, but not over-do. Actually I did use the jewelry insurance - I lost my diamond engagement ring and was able to purchase a new one using the insurance money.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for sharing! That local baker sounds amazing :)

    • @ybrynecho2368
      @ybrynecho2368 8 месяцев назад

      @@tarynmaria_ She wasn't exactly a "local baker". She was a secretary who just happened to be great at doing cake decorating.

  • @CGC1954
    @CGC1954 8 месяцев назад +1

    My biggest regret of a purchase was a Louis Vuitton purse. I don’t carry it very often. It is pretty far as it goes. My second biggest mistake was a pair of Louboutin heels, red bottoms.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад

      Ahhhh the shoes, I hear ya! I had a designer pair of shoes as well, they killed my feet and then I accidentally donated them - don't ask me what I was thinking!

  • @Pamsouthdakota
    @Pamsouthdakota 6 месяцев назад

    Tile and glass tables

  • @Bill-kj8io
    @Bill-kj8io 5 месяцев назад +1

    Never buy anything for some possibly that you hope will happen some day, like buying clothing for a child you haven’t yet conceived or decoration for a home you haven’t yet bought.

  • @margaritakots9145
    @margaritakots9145 8 месяцев назад +1

    If you buy couches in high end microfiber, they last for a very long time, are easy to clean and are great with animals. We bought ours 17 years ago and they look great

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад

      Good to know, thank you!

  • @francoiselafferty-hancock5112
    @francoiselafferty-hancock5112 8 месяцев назад +1

    Oh and yes re the home! We bought a three bedroom home 18 years ago. We had no kids and we have one now. We want to stay here forever. And te stroller, we bought a good stroller. We have no car and use it for groceries as well. Our kid's getting too big for it but we still use it as so much easier yo get around! And i didn't know jewelry insurance existed but i hate jewelry anyway.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад

      We used our stroller for years - I'm sure it looked crazy pushing our older child in it but we walk everywhere and needed it!

  • @annsalty5615
    @annsalty5615 9 месяцев назад +3

    My worst purchases 🧐, a cheap set of kitchen knives where the price was too good to be true is up there on my list as well. A manual, hand crank, meat grinder.....get powered. Pasta maker, the ones where it is supposed to do everything....do not buy. Bought stand mixer at a big box store to save a few bucks that was awful, probably a factory reject. And an overly priced food slicer that scares me to death!

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +2

      Good to know about the meat grinder, have been thinking of maybe getting one sometime!

    • @annsalty5615
      @annsalty5615 8 месяцев назад

      @@tarynmaria_ i love grinding beef and how it tastes compared to pre ground from the store. But even your best manual grinder is too much of a work out for two people. I will get a power one eventually.

    • @loisstevens-jj4cx
      @loisstevens-jj4cx 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@annsalty5615.😊

  • @charleedell92
    @charleedell92 8 месяцев назад

    A flat with service charges (UK). Also a refurbished Dyson vacuum cleaner that turned out to be full of the last owner's hamster droppings and sawdust!

  • @sandracommager9367
    @sandracommager9367 9 месяцев назад +6

    I quit buying board games. My kids loved them at other people's houses but never at home.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +3

      So true! We have lots of board games and barely use them too!

  • @imissnj2
    @imissnj2 8 месяцев назад

    Not all babies are huge and grow fast. My 6 kids were all in smaller sizzles than their age or the exact sizes of their age until they reached about 2-3 years of age. The newborn clothes lasted more than a week, and I passed them down to several of my children.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад

      Thank you for sharing!

  • @susand495
    @susand495 5 месяцев назад

    Your shoes! I'd call that a hoard! 😂😂. I'm sure you're not alone. I just never owned that many not over my life of 7 decades. Goodwill would love to sell those shoes. A 2nd child doubles the laundry. A 3rd child triples it. The same seems true with toys. Legos are the most cluttering.

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  5 месяцев назад

      Thank you for sharing!

  • @sarah9314
    @sarah9314 8 месяцев назад

    I guess I don’t totally understand the house part….why spend more if you dont have to? Less debt the better no matter if you make 30k or 300k. Saving and investing and helping others is way easier with more cash flow and less bills. I heard something like Higher mortgages only help banks and real estate agents

  • @We_Are_eBay
    @We_Are_eBay 8 месяцев назад

    One thing you can add, is how to invest the money that you save that you normally would’ve blown

  • @MrWhipp3
    @MrWhipp3 7 месяцев назад

    🙂

  • @mirelarujovic7058
    @mirelarujovic7058 8 месяцев назад +1

    Me thinking you were 29 👁👄👁

    • @tarynmaria_
      @tarynmaria_  8 месяцев назад +1

      Ahhh thank you 🙏 😊