Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, I am. My DD is talking about low paying careers and I keep reminding her that those careers will not support her high maintenance life style.
It's a a disservice to let her think otherwise.
FFS. She doesn’t have a lifestyle, she lives at a home where she makes no decisions on how she lives. Most of us know people who had lived in huge houses with everything paid for and others with a single mother in a 2 room apartment. Especially when you get to college. I wouldn’t go back to the wealthy suburbs where every huge house at least two acres and the streets are empty because no one is in them during the day even if it was free. There’s also no correlation between that kind of lifestyle and a happy marriage or healthy children.
Let your kids decide their own lifestyle and don’t worry about it. You’ll be surprised at how many of them aren't interested in repeating their childhoods. And if they do and their careers don’t pay enough then give them money. You’re not going to live forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, so my DS has now decided he wants to become a surgeon in a challenging speciality. Thumbs up from me!
I’d so thumbs down this. I’m a college drop out who makes a lot more than most surgeons in sales and had no school debt. Becoming a surgeon is $$$
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I am. My DD is talking about low paying careers and I keep reminding her that those careers will not support her high maintenance life style.
It's a a disservice to let her think otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I am. My DD is talking about low paying careers and I keep reminding her that those careers will not support her high maintenance life style.
It's a a disservice to let her think otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely, which is why what they pick as a major in college is important and spending $80K/year on a major that won't have a good ROI makes zero sense.
My younger DC wants to go out of state, but won't be majoring in STEM. Just want's to "get out of x state". I told DC that unless they pick a major that will have good ROI, we are not going to spend that much money just because they want to get out of x state. If they want to leave the state so badly they can get a job in some other state on their dime.
We also had to have a discussion about taxes and take home pay. They will hear "50K" for a salary and think that's awesome, and they can live really well in a hcol area on $50k. I brought them down to earth when I explained how much taxes would get taken out, health insurance, and 401k contribution, and what their actual take home would be as a single, childless person. That was a big shocking moment for them.
I don't know which state you are in, or if he has specific schools/states he wants to go to, but don't assume that "out of state" is automatically more expensive than "in state." Depending on his grades, SAT/ACT score, etc. he might be able to go out of state cheaper than in state.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I am. My DD is talking about low paying careers and I keep reminding her that those careers will not support her high maintenance life style.
It's a a disservice to let her think otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely, which is why what they pick as a major in college is important and spending $80K/year on a major that won't have a good ROI makes zero sense.
My younger DC wants to go out of state, but won't be majoring in STEM. Just want's to "get out of x state". I told DC that unless they pick a major that will have good ROI, we are not going to spend that much money just because they want to get out of x state. If they want to leave the state so badly they can get a job in some other state on their dime.
We also had to have a discussion about taxes and take home pay. They will hear "50K" for a salary and think that's awesome, and they can live really well in a hcol area on $50k. I brought them down to earth when I explained how much taxes would get taken out, health insurance, and 401k contribution, and what their actual take home would be as a single, childless person. That was a big shocking moment for them.