My very sticky situation
#41
eric broke his toy..now mom and dad is going to buy him another one.
eric would u do what u do to the max if u spent your hard earned $ on the car? i'm not talking about the mods...but paying insurance and making car payments.
eric would u do what u do to the max if u spent your hard earned $ on the car? i'm not talking about the mods...but paying insurance and making car payments.
#42
To BriGuyMax:
My post was a bit extreme, but I have just seen too many cases where parents' "reward system" has caused their children to become childish and irresponsible. Case in point: my ex-roommate bounced a check to me for 3 months worth of backlogged utilities that he owed me. Why? He cut me a check a day before he left for a European vacation (sponsered by his parents in response to his successful completion of the school year), and blew all of that money while there before my check could even clear! I wish this were an isolated case, but I have others involving crashing cars while drunk and having Daddy replace them, etc. It is IMHO that parents should not buy their children a car (better than "beater" status) or other high-priced items until they are out of college and fully-mature adults. Thanks for respecting my opinion.
My post was a bit extreme, but I have just seen too many cases where parents' "reward system" has caused their children to become childish and irresponsible. Case in point: my ex-roommate bounced a check to me for 3 months worth of backlogged utilities that he owed me. Why? He cut me a check a day before he left for a European vacation (sponsered by his parents in response to his successful completion of the school year), and blew all of that money while there before my check could even clear! I wish this were an isolated case, but I have others involving crashing cars while drunk and having Daddy replace them, etc. It is IMHO that parents should not buy their children a car (better than "beater" status) or other high-priced items until they are out of college and fully-mature adults. Thanks for respecting my opinion.
#43
You guys really need to open your eyes to the drug world. Rolls can be bought like candy, weed is a daily thing and cocaine is a delicacy. You really think Americas war on drugs is working? Hmm.. maybe you should visit a college, and get your kids drug tested. Bet you'll be surprised with what you find..
#44
Originally posted by Maximamike
You guys really need to open your eyes to the drug world. Rolls can be bought like candy, weed is a daily thing and cocaine is a delicacy. You really think Americas war on drugs is working? Hmm.. maybe you should visit a college, and get your kids drug tested. Bet you'll be surprised with what you find..
You guys really need to open your eyes to the drug world. Rolls can be bought like candy, weed is a daily thing and cocaine is a delicacy. You really think Americas war on drugs is working? Hmm.. maybe you should visit a college, and get your kids drug tested. Bet you'll be surprised with what you find..
When I was in high school 30 years ago (in a large city as well as in a small town), pot, LSD, MDA and "magic" mushrooms were easier to get than beer.
Everyone with more than a room-temperature IQ knows that the "War on Drugs" was (and is) a big waste of time, money and energy.
#45
Originally posted by Mizeree_X
To BriGuyMax:
My post was a bit extreme, but I have just seen too many cases where parents' "reward system" has caused their children to become childish and irresponsible. Case in point: my ex-roommate bounced a check to me for 3 months worth of backlogged utilities that he owed me. Why? He cut me a check a day before he left for a European vacation (sponsered by his parents in response to his successful completion of the school year), and blew all of that money while there before my check could even clear! I wish this were an isolated case, but I have others involving crashing cars while drunk and having Daddy replace them, etc. It is IMHO that parents should not buy their children a car (better than "beater" status) or other high-priced items until they are out of college and fully-mature adults. Thanks for respecting my opinion.
To BriGuyMax:
My post was a bit extreme, but I have just seen too many cases where parents' "reward system" has caused their children to become childish and irresponsible. Case in point: my ex-roommate bounced a check to me for 3 months worth of backlogged utilities that he owed me. Why? He cut me a check a day before he left for a European vacation (sponsered by his parents in response to his successful completion of the school year), and blew all of that money while there before my check could even clear! I wish this were an isolated case, but I have others involving crashing cars while drunk and having Daddy replace them, etc. It is IMHO that parents should not buy their children a car (better than "beater" status) or other high-priced items until they are out of college and fully-mature adults. Thanks for respecting my opinion.
I completetly agree
#46
Originally posted by Maximamike
You guys really need to open your eyes to the drug world. Rolls can be bought like candy, weed is a daily thing and cocaine is a delicacy. You really think Americas war on drugs is working? Hmm.. maybe you should visit a college, and get your kids drug tested. Bet you'll be surprised with what you find..
You guys really need to open your eyes to the drug world. Rolls can be bought like candy, weed is a daily thing and cocaine is a delicacy. You really think Americas war on drugs is working? Hmm.. maybe you should visit a college, and get your kids drug tested. Bet you'll be surprised with what you find..
#47
Hear, Hear!
MChapel
As a 30 year old (not too far removed from Eric's age, and not too far from parenthood, I can REALLY relate to what you are saying.
I'm sorry, was he complaining about getting a free car? STFU.
Was he complaining that he blew out his tranny 3x? STFU.
Was he complaining that the piano on his back was preventing him from getting a job? STFU.
Sorry Eric, it's time to take the silver spoon out of your mouth, and tell the parents that you'll be responsible. You are a STUDENT, not a person with a job. You have responsibilities that revolve around finishing your education and enjoying your free time. Your subsidization of your free time should be done by you (with SOME help from your parents). Your EXPECTATION that they help you out when you f*ck up THREE times in one year leads me to believe that you are a TOUCH too spoiled.
NOW, I'm not going to argue with Sprint, as you might be an exceptional young man, and very capable, with a bright future; and since I don't know you, I will not fully slam you...
BUT
I cannot WAIT until you get in to the real world and have to start paying for your own sh*t. Please, keep us posted when it comes to depending on your own income to pay for: rent, food, insurance, bills, debts, retirement savings, car, gas, hookers (okay, had to throw that in there to lighten this up a bit), and all the sundry things that take up people's money.
I couldn't agree more with the people who post on this thread talking about being financially responsible, and not spooging off your parents.
MY .02
Mike
As a 30 year old (not too far removed from Eric's age, and not too far from parenthood, I can REALLY relate to what you are saying.
I'm sorry, was he complaining about getting a free car? STFU.
Was he complaining that he blew out his tranny 3x? STFU.
Was he complaining that the piano on his back was preventing him from getting a job? STFU.
Sorry Eric, it's time to take the silver spoon out of your mouth, and tell the parents that you'll be responsible. You are a STUDENT, not a person with a job. You have responsibilities that revolve around finishing your education and enjoying your free time. Your subsidization of your free time should be done by you (with SOME help from your parents). Your EXPECTATION that they help you out when you f*ck up THREE times in one year leads me to believe that you are a TOUCH too spoiled.
NOW, I'm not going to argue with Sprint, as you might be an exceptional young man, and very capable, with a bright future; and since I don't know you, I will not fully slam you...
BUT
I cannot WAIT until you get in to the real world and have to start paying for your own sh*t. Please, keep us posted when it comes to depending on your own income to pay for: rent, food, insurance, bills, debts, retirement savings, car, gas, hookers (okay, had to throw that in there to lighten this up a bit), and all the sundry things that take up people's money.
I couldn't agree more with the people who post on this thread talking about being financially responsible, and not spooging off your parents.
MY .02
Mike
Originally posted by MChapel
AMAF, my 20 year-old son IS on his way to an engineering degree. Our family, however, does not have the financial resources ( only $90K a year) to pay for 5 years of tuition AND a new Honda Civic - let alone a 350Z.
Our son didn't want to go to the local university (which has an engineering department to rival MIT) and live at home. So, in order to pay for his living expenses at a different university (admittedly, it also has an excellent engineering department) 150 miles away, he works every summer - 45 to 55 hours a week - doing landscaping; hot, dirty work - and he starts most days at 6:30am - for $12.50/hr.
Up until recently, he drove my old '89 Prelude (which I sold to him for 1/2 market value), which he drove into the ground. He now drives a 94 Sentra and I pay for the insurance. Yes, he borrowed about 1/2 the money from us, but he got a part time job while at school and is paying us back $200/month.
Am I proud of my son? Hell, yes!!! My son's a young man. Eric's acting like a 10 year-old - even if he can rebuild a transmission. Eric didn't even have the ***** to rent a place to do it; he used his mom's kitchen -
AMAF, my 20 year-old son IS on his way to an engineering degree. Our family, however, does not have the financial resources ( only $90K a year) to pay for 5 years of tuition AND a new Honda Civic - let alone a 350Z.
Our son didn't want to go to the local university (which has an engineering department to rival MIT) and live at home. So, in order to pay for his living expenses at a different university (admittedly, it also has an excellent engineering department) 150 miles away, he works every summer - 45 to 55 hours a week - doing landscaping; hot, dirty work - and he starts most days at 6:30am - for $12.50/hr.
Up until recently, he drove my old '89 Prelude (which I sold to him for 1/2 market value), which he drove into the ground. He now drives a 94 Sentra and I pay for the insurance. Yes, he borrowed about 1/2 the money from us, but he got a part time job while at school and is paying us back $200/month.
Am I proud of my son? Hell, yes!!! My son's a young man. Eric's acting like a 10 year-old - even if he can rebuild a transmission. Eric didn't even have the ***** to rent a place to do it; he used his mom's kitchen -
#50
haha
You sound like a spoiled baby who doesn't even deserve to be driving a 93 sentra, let alone anything new and nice. I wonder if your first post is a joke, in the same vein as those I've posted on Anandtech in the past. Parodies on idiots I call them
#51
Damn, I am an engineering student going to a university in Canada, and my parents laugh at me when I ask them to help me buy a max. I know they will help me pay for part of it, but even with that I am confident over time I will pay them back for it.
#52
Re: haha
Originally posted by SkoorbMax
You sound like a spoiled baby who doesn't even deserve to be driving a 93 sentra, let alone anything new and nice. I wonder if your first post is a joke, in the same vein as those I've posted on Anandtech in the past. Parodies on idiots I call them
You sound like a spoiled baby who doesn't even deserve to be driving a 93 sentra, let alone anything new and nice. I wonder if your first post is a joke, in the same vein as those I've posted on Anandtech in the past. Parodies on idiots I call them
Yeah... ok... Ill cut you some slack cause you probably havent been on this board long enough to know what I've been through with this car. I had almost the worst luck with this thing- from Y pipes failing 3 times and then not fitting, to tires that take 4 hours to mount, to transmissions blowing 3x, to the outrageous insurance thats $200 less per year then one of the most expensive cars to insure for a young male driver, to dealers that give me the shaft. That and to anybody else, call me what you want, I really could care less. I dont think I'm spoiled. Most my friends drive Toyota Supra TT's, C5 and C4 corvettes, 2002 Camaro SS's, BMWs (remember the coat stolen thread?), Lexus IS300s.. yes some of them the parents bought it for them. Others worked for theirs.....and when I went to the University of Miami in FL, there were kids driving Porsches and Ferraris. So I am spoiled driving a 97 maxima family sedan that was bought used that has almost 80K miles on it? I think not. As for deserving anything, I do most of the work on my car myself, so its not like I sit on my butt and do nothing and complain and demand.
I do not have a job because I do not have time for a job. Although I'm only at a community college right now I'm 1/2 business major and 1/2 engineering major which I'm making the full switch back to engineering. I am fortunate my parents are very concerned with education (which asian parents arent? hehe) and are willing to provide. My gripe about the Honda Civic is that in my eyes it would be a waste of their money. Why would I get something that I know I'm not going to be happy with, when instead I could stuff the money in the bank while it draws interest?
#53
#54
hey eric...
back to the car choices, and call me biased, but go for the prelude. With I/H/E you'll have no problem beating most NA maximas, Honda reliability is really good, and it handles like a dream (though 5th gen preludes are a BIT heavy). At least go test drive one, and I agree with Dave B, don't get the Type SH Lude, just get a Base lude, either turbo or SC if you have money, but I'm sure you'd be happy with just the regular NA mods.
- M
back to the car choices, and call me biased, but go for the prelude. With I/H/E you'll have no problem beating most NA maximas, Honda reliability is really good, and it handles like a dream (though 5th gen preludes are a BIT heavy). At least go test drive one, and I agree with Dave B, don't get the Type SH Lude, just get a Base lude, either turbo or SC if you have money, but I'm sure you'd be happy with just the regular NA mods.
- M
#55
i also agree that if your parents offer you a car, why turn them down? when i sold my 95 i was going to use that money, and take out a loan for the difference to get a 97.. my father took me to the dealer with the intentions of leasing me a base model altima. well the max was only like 50-60 more a month, so we decided to go with the max. if my father does well, and offers to pay for my lease while im going through college and im a good kid, why would i turn it down?
if my father wants me to drive a nice car whats wrong with that? i mean if your parents offered to get you a new car and they drive an old car, or you know that they will be cutting it close financially if they bought you a new car, then i would turn it down.
if my father wants me to drive a nice car whats wrong with that? i mean if your parents offered to get you a new car and they drive an old car, or you know that they will be cutting it close financially if they bought you a new car, then i would turn it down.
#56
Re: Re: haha
Originally posted by ericdwong
Although I'm only at a community college right now I'm 1/2 business major and 1/2 engineering major which I'm making the full switch back to engineering. I am fortunate my parents are very concerned with education (which asian parents arent? hehe) and are willing to provide. My gripe about the Honda Civic is that in my eyes it would be a waste of their money. Why would I get something that I know I'm not going to be happy with, when instead I could stuff the money in the bank while it draws interest?
Although I'm only at a community college right now I'm 1/2 business major and 1/2 engineering major which I'm making the full switch back to engineering. I am fortunate my parents are very concerned with education (which asian parents arent? hehe) and are willing to provide. My gripe about the Honda Civic is that in my eyes it would be a waste of their money. Why would I get something that I know I'm not going to be happy with, when instead I could stuff the money in the bank while it draws interest?
#57
Originally posted by mattC
hey eric...
back to the car choices, and call me biased, but go for the prelude. With I/H/E you'll have no problem beating most NA maximas, Honda reliability is really good, and it handles like a dream (though 5th gen preludes are a BIT heavy). At least go test drive one, and I agree with Dave B, don't get the Type SH Lude, just get a Base lude, either turbo or SC if you have money, but I'm sure you'd be happy with just the regular NA mods.
- M
hey eric...
back to the car choices, and call me biased, but go for the prelude. With I/H/E you'll have no problem beating most NA maximas, Honda reliability is really good, and it handles like a dream (though 5th gen preludes are a BIT heavy). At least go test drive one, and I agree with Dave B, don't get the Type SH Lude, just get a Base lude, either turbo or SC if you have money, but I'm sure you'd be happy with just the regular NA mods.
- M
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