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Topic: I need a 12 step numismatic program  (Read 6840 times)
doug62
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« on: April 24, 2006, 01:45:41 pm »

Went back to the London show on Sunday. Picked up a beautiful  ;D gemUNC '37 $10 C-T.
Even bought a note we already have! LOL.

Step 1: I admit my collecting is unmanageable.......  :D
Oli1001
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« Reply #1 on: April 24, 2006, 02:21:57 pm »

Agreed! :)
RS_dude
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« Reply #2 on: April 24, 2006, 11:41:05 pm »

My wife would also agree with you. Would 12 steps be enough ? ;)
only4teeth
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« Reply #3 on: April 25, 2006, 02:09:59 pm »

Isn't the first step admitting you have a problem???   ;)
rscoins
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« Reply #4 on: April 25, 2006, 04:11:57 pm »

A minor problem without need for a cure. The only way to convince your spouse is get them involved.

Collectors of all sorts are widely mis-understood by the few non-collectors in this world.

Rick
venga50
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« Reply #5 on: April 26, 2006, 08:12:00 am »

So true!  The wife would be horrified if you described her Royal Doulton figurines as baked and painted hunks of clay :o, yet she thinks that you are a certifiable nutjob because you collect "money" and will pay many times the face value of a note.  At least the "pieces of paper" that we collect have some intrinsic value...not like those Swarovski crystal doodads that sell for wicked prices!

rscoins
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« Reply #6 on: April 26, 2006, 08:35:02 am »

The bottom line with note collecting is face value. Baked clay things with factory glaze amount to landfill in the end.

Perhaps collecting silver medals would be nicer than painted dirt.

I know a person who collects beer cans (but doesn't drink beer), another who collects match books, and regular people who collect paper money, coins, tokens. My wife collected hockey cards for a while, talk about a hobby with no end ever in sight.

Rick
walktothewater
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« Reply #7 on: April 26, 2006, 11:59:04 am »

You are all correct in one way or another: collecting is a pleasant thing to do in one's spare time (& expensive)...but who's to judge which hobby is superior?  It is easy to tear apart any person's past time, if one doesn't see the inherent value in it.  

However, all hobbies require a certain dedication, a discipline for classifying, cataloguing, grading, storing, displaying, etc.  If nothing else: collecting paper money (currency) takes a great deal of discipline since -yes it does have face value- it can be spent (rather than kept), so in that way I think collecting money is an admirable hobby. We all must be on the same page or we wouldn't be tuning into CPM forum!  ::)

The original idea was a 12-step program to either cure or curb the "addiction."

What I think everyone (tuning into this thread) needs is to set limits in terms of where they wish to take the hobby.  Like when I go to a casino (I bring a $100.00 that's it!), I have spending limits whenever I go to a show, and have really clamped down on my eBay purchases.  You gotta set yourself a budget!  You cannot reasonably expect to acquire the best collection in the country.  There'll always be a "Donald Trump" to show you just how humble your collection is.   Go look at any good dealer's paper money stock (Olmstead for example) and while you may salivate-- keep in mind he's been at it for years and its his business.  

I suggest to all those who find this hobby "out of control" to start limiting yourself in terms of what you collect.  Have a plan (what you will buy and need).  Don't just collect because its pretty or buy on impulse.  If you get "a good deal" make sure you turn around and sell it, (esp if its a double) and turn that money you made back into your hobby.  Common sense is all it takes.
James

hanmer
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« Reply #8 on: April 26, 2006, 03:46:16 pm »

Collecting anything is about having fun. As previously mentioned, most collections cost something. Very little for match books, but quite hefty for cars (I have a friend that collects Mustangs). I would also think these type of pleasures must be looked at in the longer run, as one could quickly go broke buying all the paper money they wanted to get in a very short period of time.

At least when the revolution comes, paper money can be used to start cooking fires.

My wife is a non-collector, and just shakes her head as I look at serial numbers on paper money looking for RADAR notes, prefexes, etc. The best I can hope for is that she will leave my black funds alone, and not spend the bills I've saved/purchased so far. Getting her to look for RADAR bills would be cool, but I'm not going to hold my breath.

 [smiley=beer.gif]

:)
Travsy
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« Reply #9 on: April 29, 2006, 10:23:45 pm »

Anyone who collects dead bugs isn't wired right. Nothing to do with the topic at hand but it's the truth.
On the topic, there is no hope for you save to liquidate your collection of paper money asap at a horrific loss and I'm here to help in anyway I can.
 

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