How far are you walking? Plenty of people in Chicago, DC, San Francisco, and even LA can wake up, walk to school, work, recreation, and dinner. Many cities are neighborhood based. It’s not a novelty in NYC. Not everyone is miserable in NYC. Those who have careers they can’t do anywhere else (Broadway) or are actually rich (tens of millions) like it. Yet not many cities have people making 850k working 80 hour weeks posting about how difficult it is to establish themselves and provide for their families in a way that is considered the norm in 99% of white collar America (everyone has their own room, decent education). It’s masochistic. |
If you can get a job at Sullivan and Cromwell or Goldman Sachs you can make it in Boston or Philly or Peoria in a significant way. You have to be somewhat intelligent and hard working to get where Reddit woman is today. What she lacked was foresight and the social knowledge that 850k is nothing special in NYC. Not many people have to live in NYC and optimize lifestyle and finances by doing so. Keep in mind, redditor is not a rainmaker by any stretch. |
It goes beyond “surviving.” She is harming her children and their prospects. She could easily provide breathing space and better education elsewhere yet she chooses not to out of vanity and asked strangers for help. |
Anyone making 850k and has their children splitting a bedroom fits the dumb*ss description. Also thinking you’re doing well with 850k a year in NYC is idiotic. |
| If the reddit poster lived in Chicago she would be in a city with 90% of NYC's cultural offerings and could have a great house in the city (or in the burbs on public transit) and be able to afford private school (or send her kids to some of the best public schools in the country). The winters are bad, but NYC winters are no picnic either. |
Please keep in mind she is in Carroll Gardens, not the West Village or UES. It’s not some art and culinary mecca. It’s pretty mid and far from the action. If anything she may be in a hipper area in Chicago. |
Since when is having children share a bedroom a negative? I shared a room with two sisters and turned out pretty damn great |
Could your parents readily afford for the three of you to have your own? Did they make 850k a year? If so that’s messed up |
| Weird. I checked zillow, and there are a TON of 3+ bedroom apartments for rent in NYC for less than 5,000. There is also plenty of inventory for sale under 1 million. Maybe adjust their criteria to fit their budget? |
You will not find a decent 3BR (let alone 4BR) in a safe neighborhood with decent schools at that price point. Redditor is already renting north of 5000 and isn’t in a top notch neighborhood. The NYC RE market is too competitive. |
The issue isn't sharing a room. It's parents choosing themselves over their kids. OP's kids don't share a room out of necessity, nor because OP thinks it's a good formative experience. They are sharing a room because OP made a series of short-sighted and selfish choices and now she's blaming the situation on her apparently recent discovery that NYC is super expensive. We're your parents selfish idiots too, or....? |
Curious, what did your parents refuse to buy you? An American girl doll? Nike sneakers? Anyway, whatever it was, that’s not why your life turned out the way it did. |
(Sarcasm) Yea, a parent making 850k not providing individual bedrooms is the same as not buying a child Air Jordans. And it’s right to assume an anonymous poster’s life is a disappointment |
Exactly, there was not enough thought before bringing kids into this world and they didn’t adjust accordingly. |
Ugh, no. People are fleeing that failed city and state while taking losses on their home sales. |