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35-year-old brings in around $60,000 a year and lives rent-free by pet sitting full time—everything they own fits in 2 suitcases

1d 10h ago by lemmy.world/u/return2ozma in aboringdystopia from www.cnbc.com

"Millennial Money" lol

More like Millennial lack of money.

Honestly that kind of sounds awesome to me.

I mean obviously it sucks if they're forced to do it but I love pet sitting, I enjoy seeing where people live, and I've never felt the need to be tied anywhere. If they're happy let em be.

Holding them up as an example of sigma grind or whatever obviously sucks but it in and of itself doesn't sound half bad to me.

This sounds like fucking hell, I can't see a way this works without having to work 7 days a week or being hobo-sexual

Listen I love dogs, but this is some peasant type shit. 2 suit cases being everything you own? Yeah, I'd like to practice nonattachment to this level, but I doubt you're finding nirvana doing this. There's no way this is done outside a major metro.

Edit: ok after having read the article this whole thing is fucking nonsense. Financial coach? This is a fuckin grift. They definitely have a fall back either through family or something. This article reads both as self-fellating and rage bait depending on how you lean or align yourself. it hits so many major buzzwords. Im not sure why it's even a story besides the fact it will definitely be controversial

In 2025, Stoever traveled to 10 countries while running their business, Traveler Charly Money Coaching, through which they provide clients guidance for paying down debt, building credit and saving for retirement. Six months of private money coaching, which includes biweekly hourlong calls, costs $6,000. Last year, the business brought in a little less than $60,000. Stoever takes home less than that after business expenses and taxes, but supplements their income with the occasional paid pet-sitting gig (most of the ones they take are in exchange for free accommodation) and performances at a queer burlesque.

Sounds like they roped ~10 clients into their personal financial thing, and that's where all the dough came from. "Pet sitting" is just their pleasant term for "couch surfing".

Man, if only they interviewed this guy instead of that one idiot from /r/AntiWork...

Oh, I remember something about that. That dude made the whole sub look bad. Caused a lot of drama.

The sub literally died overnight. Crazy to witness in real time. A lot of people had/have legitimate grievances about how work and labor are handled in the US and this was during and immediately after COVID lockdowns. One basement dwelling, stereotypical reddit mod delegitimized an entire movement with a single interview on Fox "news".

No one knew they had been contacted and clearly they had no media training; I'm talking clearly unbathed, wearing dirty clothes, blurry camera/video, and spinning in their chair while talking like a school child. To say it was bad is an understatement.

Support fractured and multiple subreddits were formed to distance themselves from /r/antiwork. It was actually sad to see. There was like a week or two of fighting on reddit about it. Shit like that makes you realize how effective counter-intelligence programs are. All you need is one weak link and a moment of opportunity

It's worse than I remember. He was on Fox News!?! Wow.

Yes bro, they were laughing at the mod in the middle of the segment. It's like you could see in their eyes that this was a slam dunk from the first few seconds

I mean just look at this shit

I got secondhand cringe so bad, I'm gonna go looking for another job. 🤣

Jesus.

My immediate thought:

Source

I think that's at least 5