Tuesday, June 22, 2021

june 2021 donation

this was a fun one! the Animal Rescue League occasionally has a "poorly drawn pets" fundraiser. I missed the last one so jumped this time to pay $25 for a poorly drawn molly. that's right, annie's molly, not my roux. a had to put down molly earlier this year due to her poor health but she was an incredible companion to a, and I'm very thankful. so I texted a and asked for her favorite photo of molly, no questions asked. 

I'll update again when I get the actual drawing!

p.s. technically this is NOT a donation since I'm getting something in return. but I'm counting it as a donation because that's how the org framed it. so yeah, next time you get something from a donation: membership, swag, a poorly drawn pet, you won't also be getting a tax deductible donation receipt because it wasn't actually a donation. ...you'd be surprised how often people argued with me at Algalita. they'd come in, buy an actual thing, and ask for a donation receipt. um.. no. you get a sales receipt, and you paid sales tax, because it was a sale. 

update!!! molly looks so good! on one hand I kind of wanted a terrible one because I think they're so funny. but I'm not totally sure how a would've liked that so possibly this was better. anyway, I sent it over to a and she said she loved it :) wanted to print it and add it to molly's memorial shrine. 


another update!! they put up a flickr album of a bunch of their favorites and of course molly made the cut! they raised nearly $36,000 and their 175+ volunteers drew over 1400 portraits :)

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

stocks

i invested about $1000 in the stock market (using robinhood) about a month ago. first i put in $500 and was soon up $20. then I put in another $500 and was up a total of $25, lol. but pretty soon tho I was up $80!!! and now, about 5 weeks in, I'm up $16. hahahhaha. what a ride. tho I didn't really invest to make money; I really just wanted to learn how to do it. and so far, I've learned a few things:

- buy a reasonable amount of shares in each company.
     I'm naturally cautious so I was buying like 3-5 stocks in each company regardless of their worth. well. 3 stocks at $3 doesn't do anything at all. now I invest about $50 or $100 in each company.

- decide how much you want to buy before you start clicking on stuff.
     prices can change in seconds, so know what you want before you click BUY since it'll take a few more clicks before your order actually goes thru. those seconds can matter. sucks when you realize you bought a stock for 15 cents more just because you wasted time on the buying page. 

- don't trade after market (at least on robinhood anyway)
     robinhood automates your aftermarket trades so it'll actually buy or sell when IT decides prices are right, not when you want.

- know that the biggest fluctuations are early in the day, so use that to your advantage.
     I don't know anything about market advantages, I mean personality advantages. if you like risk, trade within the first couple hours of the market opening. if you don't like risk, wait to later in the day.

- if you're not planning to day-trade (buying and selling the same stock in the same day, or within a very short time), there's no need to keep checking back on your investments. it'll just drive you crazy.

this rolls into the most important tip:
- know yourself
     1. know how much you can monetarily lose. go in thinking of your investment as a total loss. don't expect to make money, and don't invest more than you can throw away.
     2. know how much you can actually "mentally" lose. are you a person who always overthink things? probably best to not get into stocks. to the average person, there is no clear time to buy or sell and you'll end up making a bunch of "wrong" decisions. if you're going to be mad about all those decisions then do yourself a favor and don't bother investing cause you'll just be mad all the time.

something I haven't figured out yet. when to sell! obviously you should sell then prices are up, but.. how up? and way more importantly, if a stock is crashing, when should you sell then? since I've invested $50-$100 in each company, I'm willing to lose up to 20% in each. BUT I'm also in this for at least the end of the year so I'll probably wait until November and start selling slowly.