Jimmy Two-Times™
Coli Mods Catch Me If U Can Forgive Me Imma Ridah™
Well that escalated quickly.
If you disagree, fine. But the insults?
Tell the breh how to get wealthy while he's stuck making $300 a week at a job he hates.
I just saw the last comment you responded to and assumed you meant me as I am the OP, so I apologise, breh.

Also, @MarcusDigital my phone bill is £3 and my internet bill is £25 which is something like $35-$40 total.




Your mum knows you're struggling so why is she taking $100 from you?


@PhillyzFinest is correct as you need to find better or more work to sustain yourself before thinking about investing.

I'm in the same boat as you and this is what I do for more money which is to work 7 days a week with 5 days doing your normal 9-5 doing the bare minimum to not get sacked. I just do what's needed so I can keep my energy levels up in order to work on the weekends too if I feel like it. On the weekends I do door security/bouncing. That's the easiest money just standing still for a few hours. Most weekend nights I just stand there with my earphones in listening to rap music for about 7/8 hours until my graveyard shift end -- nobody bats an eye or says shyt.



There's no qualifications






It's such light work it's not even funny but it is work and it does take time outta ya day so that's why I was looking for passive income so it could be like I'm effectively working 8-9 days out of a 7 day week if that makes sense. That extra £50 or so on top a day would make life much easier.


Once you have your finances up after like 2-3 months only then start thinking about investing your money.
I've been looking into property and stock investments as Udemy has some great free courses on the subject which I think you should use too. That's what I'm looking to do within the next few years. The reason for this thread was to get some ideas but you still need to put in the research too but there's no point in having this wealth of knowledge and you've only got $200 to invest over the course of a year as that's a minimum risk for minimum return. You need to earn more to invest more.
