Saturday, March 28, 2015

Money Magazine story on 10 best states to retire in

This is a final link that I felt compelled to send today before getting ready  to work my overnight shift. My husband and I planned on living in one of the states featured and still intend to regardless of what list it made. However, it is great to know that our choice of one of the states is included on this list.


5. Virginia

best states to retire in virginia
     
    Virginia is one of the safest states in the country, and could be a good choice for retirees looking for a coastal lifestyle. It's home to miles of beaches and the Chesapeake Bay.
    About 25% of people prefer to live near the beach when they retire, Bankrate said.
    And for those who like a city feel, there's easy access to major East Coast cities like Washington, D.C. and Baltimore.

    Business Insider Story on 15 Billionaires Who Were Once Dirt Poor

    http://www.businessinsider.com/billionaires-who-came-from-nothing-2013-12

    15 Billionaires Who Were Once Dirt Poor

    ralph lauren car 2Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty ImagesRalph Lauren
    Wealth tends to create more wealth, but a rich background is not the only way to the top. Some of the world's wealthiest people started out dirt poor.
    All from humble beginnings, these 15 people not only climbed to the top of their industries but also became some of the richest people in the world.
    Although the rich do get richer, these rags-to-riches stories remind us that through determination, grit, and a bit of luck anyone can overcome their circumstances and achieve extraordinary success.


    Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/billionaires-who-came-from-nothing-2013-12?op=1#ixzz3VjC9ffI9

    Huff post story on Man Wins $7 Million From Lottery Ticket Tucked Inside Get-Well Card

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/26/lottery-ticket-get-well-card-millions-dad-son_n_6947254.html?utm_hp_ref=money&ir=Money

    Man Wins $7 Million From Lottery Ticket Tucked Inside Get-Well Card



    Recovering from surgery? How about a get-well card with 7 million reasons inside to help you feel better.
    Easton, Pennsylvania resident Joseph Amorese was laid up at home after a hernia surgery last month, so his dad did the fatherly thing and gave him a get-well card, hoping to raise his spirits. Tucked inside was a $25 scratch-off New York Lottery ticket.
    "I took my glasses off, I’m looking at it, I was pretty shocked to say the least,” Amorese told CBS New York on Wednesday, when he claimed the prize. “I had surgery so I didn’t jump up and down, but in my mind I was jumping up and down."
    Amorese, 46, said he immediately sent a picture of the ticket to his dad, who confirmed he'd indeed just won $7 million. He then called his wife, a social worker whom he married just 10 months ago, to share the news.
    "I said, 'Honey, I think we won $7,000,000,'" Amorese recalled to the New York Lottery. "And there was silence on the other end for a long time. She was too stunned to talk."
    The couple told CNN they plan to invest the money and use some of it for a second honeymoon. Other than that, says Amorese, "I don't expect [my life] to change a whole lot ... I'm still going to go to work every day. My wife's gonna go to work."
    Per the Lower Hudson Journal News, the odds of winning the jackpot on the "$7,000,000 Golden Ticket" game are 1 in 3,708,000.

    Huffpost Story on How One Woman Went From $50K in Credit Card Debt to $50K in Savings

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/creditcom/how-one-woman-went-from-5_1_b_5324492.html?utm_hp_ref=money&ir=Money

    How One Woman Went From $50K in Credit Card Debt to $50K in Savings

    By Gerri Detweiler, Credit.com
    When Julie Berry's personal and professional lives were falling apart, if someone had told her that everything would be OK -- better than before, even -- she probably wouldn't have believed it. Her world had been turned upside down and it was hard to imagine it would ever be right again.
    A dressage instructor and trainer in Texas, she had thought she had a good thing going. She managed a busy barn and gave riding lessons. The equine business is notoriously tough when it comes to making money, and she had invested thousands in hers over the years. But her loyal following of students and boarders, not to mention her love for the horses she cared for, made her feel like she was on the right path. She and her husband were also raising their daughter, who was 8 at the time.
    But in 2005 her marriage hit the rocks, and her business was hit with what she believes was a frivolous lawsuit. In the span of six months she left both a business and marriage she had worked hard to build.
    "Everything spiraled out of control. It was a horrible time," she says. "I slept a lot. That was my safe place."
    Trying to Start Over
    She moved into a farmhouse owned by some friends and tried to pick up the pieces of her life. She started to rebuild her business, but then the recession hit, which meant some clients had trouble affording her services. Some weeks there was barely enough money to put gas in the car or pay bills.
    For a while, credit cards help filled the gap. Although she had credit card balances left over from her previous business she had always made payments on time and, as a result, had generous credit limits. But when the financial crisis hit, her credit lines began to shrink and her interest rates rose. "What little I had in savings was cut in half," she says. She began to miss payments. "I was fearful, anxious."
    That's when she remembered a television segment where she had seen Today Show personal finance expert Jean Chatzky talking with guest Jordan Goodman, the author of Master Your Money, about a credit counseling agency and how it helped people get out of debt. At the time, she had no idea she would ever need their help, but the name "Cambridge" stuck in her head.
    Finally, "out of desperation," she called Cambridge Credit Counseling, the agency she heard mentioned in the show, and spoke with a credit counselor who reviewed her situation with her and explained her options.
    Getting a Game Plan
    At that point she had eight cards with balances totaling nearly $50,000, she recalls.
    The counselor proposed a Debt Management Plan that would have her out of debt in about four years. It would require a monthly payment of nearly $1000, but upon enrolling, her rates dropped to 0 percent on a few of her cards, and her rates on the others ranged from 2 percent to 9.9 percent. That meant a significant portion of her payments now went toward paying off her debt, rather than toward interest. According to the Cambridge Credit Counseling Service Transparency Report, the average interest rate for clients enrolled in a DMP was reduced 14.6 points, down from 22.0 percent to 7.4 percent, saving clients $139.26 per month on average.
    Berry says making her DMP payment each month was a struggle at times, and more than once she fell behind. But she was determined to be successful and avoidbankruptcy, and she did. In fact, she was able to pay off the entire debt in less than four years.
    Now, instead of $50,000 in debt, she has $50,000 in savings. She's become an active investor and feels much more in control of her finances.
    Berry also notes that her credit scores took a hit during this time, going from the "mid to-high 700s to a low of 430." She's worked hard to try to rebuild her credit, reviewing her credit reports and disputing mistakes, as well as monitoring her credit scores. Her scores now range between the high 600s and low 700s.
    Her credit has improved enough that she just refinanced her home and reduced the interest rate on her mortgage from 6.6 percent to 4.6 percent, saving $200 a month.
    Like many people who have survived traumatic experiences, she feels that what she's been through has taught her valuable things about herself and her inner strength. "It was a very difficult experience but a very enriching experience," she observes. "It's not about the material things; it's about who you love and who loves you. I am a lot more compassionate now."
    Indeed, Berry says she feels like she is in a very good place now. Her debt is paid off, she has money in savings, she is engaged to a man she describes as "happy, positive, supportive." She also decided to change careers and has launched her own line of bath products called Luxe Heavenly Bodies Collection.
    "Life just teaches you lessons," she says, "and if you are alert enough to get through them, it passes."
    Digging out of steep credit card debt can be hard work.  But as you reduce your debt, it can be helpful to keep an eye on your credit along the way.  Monitoring your credit scores can show you, over time, how your efforts are paying off; it can also alert you to any problems if, say, your scores unexpectedly drop.  There are free tools that can help you do that, like Credit.com's Credit Report Card, which gives you your credit scores and an overview of your credit profile, updated every month.  Check your credit reports regularly, too (which you can do for free annually), to look for errors or other negative items that could be affecting your scores.

    Forbes Article by Liz Ryan


    Not Everyone Is Cut Out For Entrepreneurism:' Another Business Lie
    I sympathize with anyone who says “I’m just not the entrepreneurial type!” but it’s too bad, because we all have to find our inner entrepreneurs now. The old working world is gone. You can’t hand over the reins for your career to your boss. That is not an option anymore. Job tenures are becoming shorter and shorter. You have to run your own career, so whether you work for yourself or for an employer, you’re still in charge.
    You have to run your career like a business. How you get paid is a clerical detail. You have to have the same eye on the horizon that every ship’s captain does.
    It’s a lie that not everyone can run his or her own business. Your business might be an independent concern, or your business might be your career. You could call it “Joe’s Career” or “Sanjeev’s Adventures in Silicon Valley.” It doesn’t matter what you call it. It’s a business, and it’s the biggest investment of time, energy, money and brain cells that you’ll ever make.
    The problems you’ll solve are exactly the same problems every entrepreneur grapples with. What can I do to make money in this business? Who needs what I have to sell? That question begs the related question, What exactly DO I have to sell?
    Entrepreneurs develop products and services that people and organizations need. If your business is your career, then your big question is “What kind ofBusiness Pain do I solve for my employers?” You have to know the answer to that question.
    Maybe you solve the pain that results when a small business doesn’t know where its dollars and cents are coming from or where they’re going. Maybe you solve the pain that a government agency experiences when it can’t find good people to fill its job openings.
    Forget about your Skills. That is an old dogma and it’s no good these days. Everyone claims the same six or seven Skills: Negotiation Skills, Communication Skills, and so on. They mean nothing. Who can say what you  mean when you claim Excellent Negotiation Skills?

    Friday, March 27, 2015

    Online Link Shares 8 inspiring women who are self-made millionaires by Mother Nature Network and Having It All The #1 Fatal Mistake People Make Around Achieving Success by John Assaraf

    It excited me to also do this final link sharing to the following story because of the detailed information and success case studies on how these 8 women attained financial freedom via this article

    8 inspiring women who are self-made millionaires


    http://www.mnn.com/money/personal-finance/photos/8-inspiring-women-who-are-self-made-millionaires/trendsetters




    I admit that he (John Assaraf)right away mentioned something that I was doing without realizing it. The premise of what he mentioned does sound scary. However, the suggestions he gave resonate with both my logical and intuitive sides.

    http://myneurogym.com/havingitall3/?inf_contact_key=560179ac3e2133599795673a60e2ead3df172fdf52440326dd72ecebc27c9ca2

    The #1 Fatal Mistake People Make Around Achieving Success

    Found One on the Internet and the Other Via Twitter Jon Hamm and the Mad Men Cast Celebrate the Show’s Send-off with Black & Red Ball and The Secrets of Self Made Women

    http://www.self.com/life/work/secrets-self-made-women/

    Meet Ella Woodward, food-blogging powerhouse.

    Meet Michelle Phan, makeup guru extraordinaire.

    Meet Carolina, brilliant and successful neurosurgeon.
    Meet Jana, star-making savant. (Think Jay-Z and Rita Ora.)



    self-made-women-landing


    http://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2015/03/mad-men-finale-season-party?mbid=social_twitter

    PARTIES

    Jon Hamm and the Mad Men Cast Celebrate the Show’s Send-off with Black & Red Ball

    By Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images.
    The AMC drama’s cast and crew gathered in downtown Los Angeles for a farewell party.
    In Los Angeles, people tend to interpret dress codes as sartorial suggestions—choosing jeans or similarly casual wear for a cocktail event. But when it came to celebrating Mad Men, the AMC drama that reminded television masses of 60s-era style, elegance, and aesthetic pride, Angelenos went all out in black-tie gala regalia for Wednesday night’s Mad Men send-off—a Black & Red Ball at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.
    Before a screening of the April 5 Mad Men episode inside the appropriately 60s-era music hall, series mastermind Matthew Weiner and AMC president Charlie Collier welcomed the Emmy-winning drama’s cast and crew onstage for a final bow at the last-ever AMC celebration for the series. (Even Jared Harris and Robert Morse—their characters six feet deep in the proverbial Mad Men grave, were there for the send-off.) After introducing everyone, including January JonesChristina HendricksJohn Slattery, andVincent Kartheiser —(Elisabeth Moss was in New York City for her Broadway showThe Heidi Chronicles)—Collier ended by calling out “the incomparable, the wonderful” Jon Hamm. Clad in a white dinner jacket, looking every bit the dapper Don Draper, Hamm lightened the nostalgic mood by running down the entire line of cast and crew, slapping theirs hands like he had just finished up a sports game.
    Weiner took the podium to a standing ovation before making a few remarks about his magnum opus. “I am overwhelmed by this opportunity to turn ideas and American history and a bunch of people that I made up into a party this big nine years later,” Weiner said, marveling at the scale and formality of the farewell fĂȘte. “In the end, I suppose I’ll be by myself with a computer again. But, I've said this before: TV writing is for people who hate being alone more than they hate writing. I was never alone on this journey. Everything you see is an act of collaboration. I’m grateful not just to the people I worked with every day, but to my friends, my family, and strangers on the street for never hesitating to tell me what they really think.”
    Ever the storyteller, Weiner closed his remarks by reminding the audience of what had happened in the previous Mad Men episode. “All you have to know is that America had landed on the moon,” Weiner said, beginning his expert recap. “There’s a moment of great optimism. Bert passes away. Roger asserts his leadership. They sell the agency to McCann Erickson, and with this windfall of ridiculous proportions financially, Don realizes that the best things in life are free.”
    After the screening, guests poured out of the theater into the elaborate four-story foyer for live music and revelry. Hamm—the lone white-suited character in a sea of black and red—sat in the center of a banquette regaling friends with stories. Cast members Hendricks, Kartheiser, Aaron StatonRich Sommer, and costume designer Janie Bryant circled the art deco bars in conversation. And outside, on the smoking patio—of course there was a smoking patio, it was a Mad Men party—January Jones reminisced about how, about six years ago, she and Hamm had shot scenes for Don and Betty’s Season 3 business trip to Rome just a few feet away in front of the courtyard fountain. Even after the series ends in May, though, she and her Mad Men ex-husband will always have Rome . . . or at least their memories of re-creating it in downtown L.A.
    Mad Men returns for its final episodes on April 5.