Anonymous wrote:NP here. My spouse and I are teachers also. We used to live in a major city where housing in a safe area was comparable to DC. We couldn't afford it and had to live in a sketchy neighborhood with not so great schools. We moved to a suburb that wasn't so fancy or expensive. Our house is super simple, we don't take nice vacations, we share one car, we save like crazy but we do have a nice life. For me, I lived in developing countries for part of my life and I've seen how most of the world lives. And yes, comparatively, we live like kings. We have clean water, healthy food, healthcare and a roof over our heads. Our children have a lot of what they want. Happiness doesn't have much to do with income, it has to do with relationships. And while DC is expensive, no one is forcing anyone to live there. There's an entire nation that has a lot to offer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:where do you live? how did you pay off your house in early 30s?
Without entering into too many details, we're in Delaware. We paid off the house in our mid 20s within 4 years of purchase by making sure it didn't cost more than 2x our income; at the time, we made 50k, so we bought a 100k house on a 15-year mortgage. Made extra payments from the start, salaries went up, killed it off.
Well prepare to get your sheet jumped. Some people here will rip you because you don't live here
Anonymous wrote:Okay I'll play. I'm a nanny and my 4 bedroom condo is paid off in SF. Not DC but the cost of living is higher here! My parents bought me the condominium though so all my money is play money and I don't have to live in Delaware!!!!
Anonymous wrote:I’m impressed with how much you give to charity, OP. So many people on here give so little or nothing with a six figure income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:where do you live? how did you pay off your house in early 30s?
Without entering into too many details, we're in Delaware. We paid off the house in our mid 20s within 4 years of purchase by making sure it didn't cost more than 2x our income; at the time, we made 50k, so we bought a 100k house on a 15-year mortgage. Made extra payments from the start, salaries went up, killed it off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But living simply and scrimping and saving does not equal living like kings. Your post is mistitled.
I don't see any scrimping in our lifestyle. I also don't think living well means spending every last dollar and then some; by definition, if you aren't doing that, you're saving. And regarding simple living--we're living a life that makes us happy, all of our needs are met, and we don't have too many wants. If your definition of living well is based primarily on things you can't have, then you're always going to see yourself as living like a pauper. That's not the way we see the world.
But that's not how kings live. Kings do not live simply. Kings do not homeschool.
This is why the title of the post is misleading. Because you are happy and content with how much you earn and how you live does not mean you are living like a king. At least be honest about that.
They may not be living like kings by *your* standards, but they are by theirs. Isnt that what matters?
Absolutely! But to come on DCUM and entitle a post "living like Kings" then I'd venture a guess that most people are thinking they are indeed living somewhat luxuriously. Which they are clearly not. I think a more appropriate title would be something like "100K HHI in a suburban environment and we are extremely happy"
Ha, I just saw this. To us, we're definitely living luxuriously--compared to most in the US and definitely compared to most on Earth. It doesn't bother us that some folks out there spend more or buy more things.