Anonymous wrote:Did you all who make less than $100,000/year go to college? Or, perhaps I should ask, graduate from college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher- I will never make 100K.
Yes, but you get summers off and huge breaks throughout the year, not a bad deal really.
Plus teachers get amazing pensions. Actually a great deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't know how you live here on that. We make twice that and I feel like it's a constant struggle. Color me impressed!
See, these comments baffle me. You're living in a different universe to me if you feel like you're struggling on over 140K.
Anonymous wrote:trollol wrote:My parents raised two kids on an income of just below 45k in Bellevue, Washington. We had a nice, 4 bedroom house in the 98005 zip code. It's completely possible to raise a family in a high cost-of-living city and still provide great childhood memories. Folks posting hyperbole like the inability to fathom a family existence under 150k HII are out of touch with reality. Realize that the majority of Americans survive, thrive, and raise very happy families with incomes well below the 100k mark.
If you're having problems staying happy above that six-figure line, you really should reconsider your spending habits.
Did they pay for college? Are they able to travel? Can they retire?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you all who make less than $100,000/year go to college? Or, perhaps I should ask, graduate from college?
seriously? You think college means an automatic six figure salary?
I have a BA from a top 25 university and a graduate degree. I never broke $50K after working FT for 10 years. I didn't chose a high paying field, even though I probably would have done fine in them. I chose the do-gooder life, not the path to the most money.
+1, although I did finally break $50k after 10 years. Then I had to leave that job to move abroad for DH's work. Then I come back to a rotten economy. *sigh* oh well. Money isn't everything. The experiences I have had have been priceless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you all who make less than $100,000/year go to college? Or, perhaps I should ask, graduate from college?
seriously? You think college means an automatic six figure salary?
I have a BA from a top 25 university and a graduate degree. I never broke $50K after working FT for 10 years. I didn't chose a high paying field, even though I probably would have done fine in them. I chose the do-gooder life, not the path to the most money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me, living pretty well means being able to save 40% of our income.
11:34 here. In the last three years, I ended my abusive marriage, got off welfare, more than doubled my salary and paid off substantial consumer debt, so my frame of reference is probably a little different than yours. DC and I are safe, healthy and our needs are met, with enough left over to spend a little on wants. We're living pretty well.
Anonymous wrote:My first ever "real" job paid $15k a year, but I make well over ten times that now. I don't seem to have any more money lying around now than I did then. I'm male, single, no kids or alimony to pay, so I don't really know what my excuse is.