Money
and Taxes
“It
is not the creation of wealth that is wrong, but the love of money
for its own sake.”
Margaret
Thatcher
“I've
got all the money I'll ever need, if I die by four o'clock.”
Henny
Youngman
I'm
in the process of doing my taxes, y'all. It's the most stressful
thing I do all year. I have a Master's degree, but when it comes to
figuring my taxes, my cerebral cortex shuts down completely. My brain
is of no use to me whatsoever. I can't add a line of figures using a
calculator and get the same number twice. I can't figure what
fifty-five point five cents per mile comes out to without
deconstructing it. It's pathetic.
I
am going to stop telling God my plans, I'll tell you that! God takes
them into consideration when planning diabolical schemes to wake me
up. When I was twenty-five, I told God that I didn't want to be going
through a divorce at forty-five—guess what! Divorce. When I sat
down with my accountant (and God) twenty years ago, I told them I
didn't want to be worrying about money when I was sixty-five. And
here I am, worrying about money! I know. You're saying, let me get my
violin and play some sad music to go with all this whining. I don't
blame you. I just had to get it out of my system. When it comes to
figuring taxes, my cousin Sandy got all the brains. I think there
must have been a rationing program when my family came through the
line. Maybe the heavenly hosts were going through sequestration.
Anyway,
my good angel knows that I am extremely fortunate in the big
picture—and so do I. I know that much of the world lives on almost
nothing and I do not make light of their hardship. I know, too, that
the more we have, the more we think we need, and that there is true
peace of mind in having fewer worldly goods to worry about. There is
a point at which we live to support all the things that surround
us—and in America that's a lot. Poverty is not based upon how much
money you actually have, but on how much more you feel you need. Some
of us have actual need, and some of us simply aren't satisfied with
what we have.
Tax
time is a good time to ponder one's relationship to money. How
important is it to you? If you have the feeling of not-enough-ness,
is it real or imagined? What could you do with regard to money to
give yourself peace of mind? These are questions I'm asking myself
right now. (Don't tell God!)
In
the spirit,
Jane
1 comment:
Best to get a pro to help you prepare your taxes. That way, the process wouldn’t be as complicated and things would be less stressful for you, though that’s an additional expense you have to cover. But that’s nothing, if you’d have peace of mind in return. Allison@Iley & Associates
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