Anonymous wrote:If you are real (and I admit to always doubting the veracity of these posts), I’m happy for you.
I don’t understand it, it’s not how I would like to live- but you pay your bills and you are happy. That makes me happy for you. We don’t all have to want the same things to appreciate the simple beauty of any family creating then enacting the life that they want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forget everything else- I just want to know how a family of four only spends $300-$400 on food. I take it that you never go out for dinner or do takeout. Are you eating a lot of rice and beans? Anyhow genuinely curious what your meal plan is because I would love lowering my grocery cost.
We do takeout once a week as a date night but primarily eat in--not for money, but for health. Our meal plans are related to a lot of what you'll find in the Blue Zones books--very healthy, primarily plant-based meals with some meats now and then. Tonight's meal, for example, involved mashed potatoes (starting with the actual potatoes), green beans (fresh), fish (frozen), and milk (organic, free-range, etc). Last night was brown rice, black-eyed peas, eggs, cheese, broccoli, and milk / water. The biggest suggestion I can make is to focus on eating less like a normal American and more like...well, someone in one of the Blue Zones. We don't do it for the money at all--several of the things we choose cost a lot, like the half-gallon milk jugs that cost around $4 each, or the eggs that are around $4 a dozen--it's all about the health. But when you eat for health, you naturally eat out a lot less and eat a lot less fatty, meaty, sugary stuff, which then drops costs a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing op has typed shows the he and his family "live like kings". Their food/meals sound boring and actually sorta meager, both husband and wife work, vacations?, kid activities? nothing about living in luxury like a king.
Sure, you may be better off than some, but you also aren't that well off and def not "living like a king"
A better post title would be
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does homeschool look like with two working parents? Especially homeschooling four kids?
The plan right now is for one of us to stay home to teach, most likely my wife.
Anonymous wrote: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
Yup, that's pretty standard in these threads. It's always interesting, though, because the COLA calculators are pretty consistent in each thread. Our lifestyle would cost ~150k in DC. That's still well under the 300k people declare to be barely middle class. Yet lots of posters come back with the cognitive distortion of claiming that a.) it would cost far, far, far more to live like that in DC while simultaneously claiming b.) we're living like paupers. Which is it? Would it take hundreds of thousands more to live this well in DC, or are we really suffering compared to those in DC?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Forget everything else- I just want to know how a family of four only spends $300-$400 on food. I take it that you never go out for dinner or do takeout. Are you eating a lot of rice and beans? Anyhow genuinely curious what your meal plan is because I would love lowering my grocery cost.
Anonymous wrote:Ive often wished that DH and/or I had jobs we could take anywhere: teachers, medical professionals, etc. We have friends who have moved to much lower COL areas, akin to what OP has going on, and love it.
Unfortunately DH has a specialized career field that limits our options to very high cost of living areas.

Anonymous wrote:This is what you get for 100k in Washington DC
http://www.longandfoster.com/homes-for-sale/2201-Hunter-Place-SE-UNIT-201-Washington-DC-20020-219096413
Trying to use the Delaware suburbs to set a comparison is a waste of time.
Anonymous wrote: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
Yup, that's pretty standard in these threads. It's always interesting, though, because the COLA calculators are pretty consistent in each thread. Our lifestyle would cost ~150k in DC. That's still well under the 300k people declare to be barely middle class. Yet lots of posters come back with the cognitive distortion of claiming that a.) it would cost far, far, far more to live like that in DC while simultaneously claiming b.) we're living like paupers. Which is it? Would it take hundreds of thousands more to live this well in DC, or are we really suffering compared to those in DC?![]()