Clueless-Zombies

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Keep working hard. You’re one of the good ones.

wearethe99percent:

When I was 17, I chose to attend an affordable state school in a village close to home even though I had been accepted to 2 “Ivy’s” and many of my friend were attending prestigious Universities around the country. My parents, who worked blue collar jobs, could not provide much support for my education so I chose state school knowing that I would have to pay the debt in full. I worked two jobs through college to make ends meet and networked constantly my junior and senior year to try to find work after school. The Monday after graduating with my “useless” communications degree, I started as an intern in IT at a local college, making minimum wage  doing work that was not related to major, but work nonetheless. After a year of showing up on time and doing my job, they hired me full time and I was awarded affordable health benefits and a retirement fund. Two years and no raises later, they offered to pay for my MBA through their program at the business school. In 2010, I bought my first car, a new toyota corolla with money that I’d saved for almost 5 years. In 2011, I bought my first house on my own after living on my own since college in a shared apartment — a $72K, 1 bedroom condo with mortgage payments that were affordable, even with my low income. Shortly after, I finished my MBA and I was promoted into a higher paying job that allowed me to make larger payments against my debt while continuing to live a modest life. I do not live with a great deal of luxury, but my life is the result of constant forethought and planning to secure comfortable means to live by. I do not not now, nor have I ever relied on anyone else to pay my way through life.
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Keep working hard. You’re one of the good ones.

wearethe99percent:

When I was 17, I chose to attend an affordable state school in a village close to home even though I had been accepted to 2 “Ivy’s” and many of my friend were attending prestigious Universities around the country. My parents, who worked blue collar jobs, could not provide much support for my education so I chose state school knowing that I would have to pay the debt in full. I worked two jobs through college to make ends meet and networked constantly my junior and senior year to try to find work after school. The Monday after graduating with my “useless” communications degree, I started as an intern in IT at a local college, making minimum wage  doing work that was not related to major, but work nonetheless. After a year of showing up on time and doing my job, they hired me full time and I was awarded affordable health benefits and a retirement fund. Two years and no raises later, they offered to pay for my MBA through their program at the business school. In 2010, I bought my first car, a new toyota corolla with money that I’d saved for almost 5 years. In 2011, I bought my first house on my own after living on my own since college in a shared apartment — a $72K, 1 bedroom condo with mortgage payments that were affordable, even with my low income. Shortly after, I finished my MBA and I was promoted into a higher paying job that allowed me to make larger payments against my debt while continuing to live a modest life. I do not live with a great deal of luxury, but my life is the result of constant forethought and planning to secure comfortable means to live by. I do not not now, nor have I ever relied on anyone else to pay my way through life.

  • 1 year ago > wearethe99percent
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  1. lincoln-mobile-marketing reblogged this from wearethe99percent
  2. webfire-traffic-tools reblogged this from wearethe99percent
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  6. inaccuratereality reblogged this from wearethe99percent
  7. abigator-elf reblogged this from wearethe99percent and added:
    EXACTLY!! THIS IS HOW YOU ARE SUPPOSED TO LIVE!
  8. abigator-elf likes this
  9. graceinmyheart likes this
  10. cluelesszombies reblogged this from wearethe99percent and added:
    Keep working hard. You’re one
  11. nightskieswithstarryeyes reblogged this from kelseycosmos
  12. graciouslygraceful likes this
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  18. madamescherzo reblogged this from wearethe99percent and added:
    Coke Nail: Advice...‘99 Percent’ Movement.
  19. madamescherzo likes this
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  39. teacherdee reblogged this from caffeinatedfeminist and added:
    All of the above commentary PLUS fuck the notion that an Ivy League education is a luxury item. If you had any mental...
  40. my-racing-thoughts reblogged this from keepmyoceanscalm
  41. iiiwhore likes this
  42. bright-and-erly reblogged this from rachelthehottie
  43. bright-and-erly likes this
  44. keepmyoceanscalm reblogged this from rachelthehottie and added:
    i believe in this so, so much. happiness > everything. this is so inspiring, dooood
  45. private-revolution reblogged this from caffeinatedfeminist and added:
    *Deep breaths* Okay OP, I appreciate the fact that you’re part of a small percentage of people in this country who are...
  46. Candie submitted this to wearethe99percent
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If you're the 99%, you're a glaring example of why the 1% deserve lower taxes. Anything given to you is clearly wasted.
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