LIVING WELL ON PRACTICALLY NOTHING by EDWARD H. ROMNEY
A frugal, tightwad, money-saving resource for independent living, survival
and financial independence. Move to the country. find a new job, a new
career or retire comfortably on very little money. This website promotes the book, LIVING WELL ON
PRACTICALLY NOTHING, REVISED AND UPDATED.
Here is a webpage for people who need to live on a lot less money. Maybe
you have lost your job... Maybe you want to move to a nice, safe country
place where you can't earn as much money as you did in the city. Maybe you
are unable to live in comfort on your retirement income because your stocks
and bonds now only earn 2% or 3% compared to the 5% to 12% they once
earned. Maybe you want to live on one salary so the wife can bring up the
kids at home and maybe home school them too. This book will help you
with all your problems.
You can live on very little money if you know where to relocate to live
cheaply ...and you know how to save money. This web
page give you an introduction. More information is in my popular book Living Well on Practically
Nothing which you can order here.
Good low cost locations to live: Rural North and South Carolina, Georgia
and Alabama are some low cost places to live. Northern Maine, away from
the seacoast, is good, if you like a cold climate. So is rural western
Pennsylvania. In the Southwest, New Mexico is very low cost, and a
beautiful, friendly place. Specific towns and cities and their
advantages are all covered in the LIVING WELL book.
What you will find in the country...
Houses for $40,000 or less, land for as low as
$1000 an acre, rents for 2 bedroom apartments $250 to $400/mo. Housing can
be even cheaper if you build your own log cabin, A-frame, or refurbish an
old trailer or abandoned house. Food is good and low cost from local farms;
you can raise a garden; there are excellent flea markets and thrift shops
to buy most anything. In New Mexico you can cross the border to get huge
discounts on prescription medicine, eyeglasses, medical and dental care,
auto body work, and upholstery in Mexico.
 |
| An
attractive, clean, low cost, trailer park in New Mexico. |
How to Get the Money to Move: Sell your expensive northern suburban house
for $250,000 to $500,000. Buy your rural country home for $40,000 or less.
Invest the difference wisely or use it to start a small business.
How to earn a living in the country...
Here are a few good businesses you
can start for very little money...
1. Rent a power paint sprayer and paint houses for people. Hire temporary
workers as needed from people hanging around outside the employment office.
Have the homeowner buy paint in advance so you will not be out your own
money. Should earn $150/day or more.
2. Become an antique dealer, deal in collectibles or flea market items. It
is fairly common to buy an item locally for $10 and sell it for $200 at a
trade fair, or on the internet. I've done this. My book tells you how.
Many antique traders have become millionaires.
3. Tutor kids, help them learn to read, help people learn to work their
computers. Design their web pages. Sell things for them on the internet.
4. You might learn welding at a community college. Mount a welding machine
on an old pickup truck and go around welding all sorts of things. Should
be possible with an investment of no more than $6000. Quite lucrative.
Better paying than many jobs requiring a college degree.
5. Fix up an old step van or motor home to sell hot-dogs, hamburgers and
ice cream at flea markets, county fairs and other events.

*************************************************
Here's how to get money enough to start a larger business...Both you and your
wife work but you live on only one salary and bank the rest of the money.
In two or three years you should have saved $50,000 or more, which is
enough to start a small farm, a restaurant, a print shop, a used car lot,
or a video rental place... or many other good businesses. People become
millionaires this way. All it takes is willpower.
My son started this pallet business on an investment of $2000. Using
retained earnings, he built this large factory after only 12 years. Many
success stories like this are in my book.
 |
| Ed's Pallet World, Ellenboro, NC |
Real Success Secrets: The secrets of successful people are closely held by
old families with money. They are passed down from generation to
generation. You will not learn them in college. Very seldom do you find
them in books or articles. Why am I telling them
in my book???? Because I am
worried about our nation's future... There are too few people these days
who are business or investment oriented for our society to continue to be
successful. I am satisfied with what I have, and I have no fear of
competition. So I have told all I know.
Consumer Mentality: Most people, you know, have "consumer mentality". They
cannot resist advertising. They spend every bit of money they make...no
matter how high their salary...often buying the most ridiculous luxuries,
big powerful boats, SUV's, trading often, filling their closets with
clothes and shoes they never wear. They consider money as something like
ice that they must dispose of fast.
Investment Mentality: People with investment mentality, on the other hand,
value their capital, their net worth the highest... Their prize
possessions are things that earn money--like a Caterpillar tractor, a
digital copier, a restaurant, a fine stock portfolio, or a bed and
breakfast. Theirs is a different world, one you would enjoy joining...
How can you save money and live on very little? Here are some ways.
1. Avoid all debt. This is most important of all. Debts are for losers--
except in rare cases, for example, starting a business you know will be
successful, or going to medical school.
2. Buy clothes, appliances and most items second hand in flea markets and
thrift shops. We show you how in the book.
3. Raise food in a home garden, buy in farmers' markets and flea markets.
Use economical foods like powdered milk, oatmeal and dried lima beans.
Avoid frozen foods and convenience foods. Go hunting and get a deer or an
antelope. Keep it in your freezer and it will give you meat for months.
4. Minimize your transportation cost. Live close to work. Ride a small used
motorcycle or bicycle, or walk. Or drive a ten or fifteen year old used car
bought very cheaply and maintain it yourself. We tell how in the book.
Cars can last as long as 60 years or 600,000 miles if well cared for. They don't rust
out in the Sunbelt.

5. Don't feel a college education is essential for yourself or your
family. The brightest and most successful man I know personally, an
inventor, never went to college. I, myself, learned much more studying on
my own than I ever learned from a professor. It may be better to put the
$25000-$35000 a year that a college education costs into starting a small
business instead.
6. If you invest money, do not listen to brokers and financial publications
whose advice is usually self-serving. Mutual funds are risky. Even if you
have as little as $15,000 to invest, buy several good dividend-paying
common stocks such as telephone companies, power companies, oils, strong
industrials (such as GE) major banks and KEEP THEM through good times and
bad! Old families kept good stocks for generations. Traders usually lose
everything.
*************************************************
When you move to the country you will enter a different and more
friendly lifestyle. Learn to enjoy nice social activities there- clubs like
the Moose and the Grange. Go to the many local dinners, festivities, fairs,
rodeos, square dances, auctions, and car races. It is great fun and quite
economical. My book will show you how to get along with rural people, and
really BECOME a country person.
How Do I Know All This Stuff? Dad lost his money in 1929, and we were very
poor in the Depression. I was a small boy then. As an adult, I worked in a
variety of middle level jobs in government and academia and also
moonlighted as an antique dealer for many years. I've lived in rural areas
most of my life. I worked in Lyndon Johnson's "War on Poverty" for a time
in the 1960's . I got to know the poor and realized that federal programs
were NOT the solution. In 1969, I quit my regular job and have been
self-employed ever since. I wrote the first "Living Well" book in 1992 and
it has had a very good sale. The latest greatly expanded Living Well on
Practically Nothing book was finished in 2001.
GETTING MORE INFORMATION--There is much more to tell than we can show here.
Order my very popular 193 page 81,000 word book LIVING WELL ON PRACTICALLY
NOTHING, Paladin Press ISBN 1-58160-282-0, the new revised and updated 2001
edition. It costs $21 plus $6 shipping and handling USA, $7 Canada, $10
foreign. Autographed if you wish. Talk it up, try to get as many copies in
circulation as you can. It is a good book.
LIVING WELL ON
PRACTICALLY NOTHING COSTS $21, PLUS $6 SHIPPING AND HANDLING USA, $7, CANADA,
$10 FOREIGN.
Order yours using our secure
Order Form
Or
you can phone in your order at 864-597-1882 or write it in a letter to
Romney Publishing , Box 487 Drayton SC 29333 .
To learn about more Ed Romney books, click here.
Ed Romney, Romney Publishing, Box 487 Drayton SC 29333 Phone
864- 597-1882
Copyright C 2001-2003
Last modified:
March 18, 2003. |
|
|
|