Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s so boring to be a frugal rich person. So what if you have millions in the bank if you aren’t having fun? You can’t take it with you.
Because having no debt/paying for my kids college and giving them a leg up in life is more fun.
Honestly money is not the source of most of my fun nowadays. My relationships with friends and family are what give me joy and we have enough to have wonderful parties and go on (not super fancy) vacations with them. My hobbies- art and gardening and reading, also give me fun and joy and don’t cost a ton.. We would do this regardless of whether we were millionaires or not.
Anonymous wrote:It’s so boring to be a frugal rich person. So what if you have millions in the bank if you aren’t having fun? You can’t take it with you.
Anonymous wrote:It’s so boring to be a frugal rich person. So what if you have millions in the bank if you aren’t having fun? You can’t take it with you.
Anonymous wrote:What about “Scions with inherited wealth”?
Anonymous wrote:I wish they allocated percentages to each category. Not sure I'd call all business owners dreamers (a guy with 3 dry cleaners is a dreamer??), but if you took savers/investors and regular business owners, that's probably 90% of all millionaires.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are definitely in the safer-investor group but my husband also climbed the corporate ladder in an entrepreneurial way that really added to our wealth. But until he retired it was the saver-investor approach that really created a lot of wealth. We have preached this to our adult children and they seem to be following a similar path.
Oxymoron.
Anonymous wrote:We are definitely in the safer-investor group but my husband also climbed the corporate ladder in an entrepreneurial way that really added to our wealth. But until he retired it was the saver-investor approach that really created a lot of wealth. We have preached this to our adult children and they seem to be following a similar path.
Anonymous wrote:Huh. The most accessible is the saver-investor. You don't even need to be rich. We'll be comfortable in retirement and our kid will be able to go to school wherever she wants. And we didn't have to climb the ladder in a corporate career or become the very best at what we do. We've lived very balanced lives with a lot of work-life balance, but we live under our means and are constantly tucking money away for later in various investment accounts. It pays off.
Though my "dream" is to be one of the dreamers. I own my own business and would love if one of my passion projects suddenly turned into a windfall for us. Then we really could be rich because our saving/investing prowess means we wouldn't blow it all on something frivolous and could probably turn it around to work for us pretty fast.[/quote]
I could have written this -- that IS the dream.
Good for you for getting out there and becoming a business owner!
I'm afraid I'd be too scared to leave my well paying job to open something of my own... even with DH's $250,000 salary. 🤷♀️