Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's spending power for some, it's not having to work for me. There is nothing I want to buy. There's nothing I can buy to improve my life significantly. It's already good when I have work as an option, no significant expenses, no health problems.
My biggest problems right now is to get in shape and how to spend all this free time I have. I will never be able to convince people that I don't care to upgrade my home, buy more stuff, or a luxury car. I would have thought most people feel like that by mid-life.
Similar, but I have one very expensive hobby and I already work out 5x/week. I don't ever want to do another reno and I don't care about cars. College is paid for. My closets are full, I have fine jewelry & luxury purses and don't feel like I need anything more. I only shop at Christmastime and mainly for others. DH wants one more fancy car, but has the watches, suits, etc. I think we're done with consumerism.
Anonymous wrote:It's spending power for some, it's not having to work for me. There is nothing I want to buy. There's nothing I can buy to improve my life significantly. It's already good when I have work as an option, no significant expenses, no health problems.
My biggest problems right now is to get in shape and how to spend all this free time I have. I will never be able to convince people that I don't care to upgrade my home, buy more stuff, or a luxury car. I would have thought most people feel like that by mid-life.
Anonymous wrote:I see these posts all the time: is 300k HHI rich? Is 300k middle class in DC? Why 300-400k HHI isn’t enough to “feel” rich and so on with people arguing back and forth.
Why the constant focus on income? It obscures the real issue, imo, which is that “feeling” rich = knowing what’s in your bank account. I would hazard to guess that the average American wouldn’t “feel” rich without at least $3-5 million in savings/investments, excluding their primary residence (because you have to live somewhere and with housing so inflated, most can’t or don’t want to downsize).
Anonymous wrote:I see these posts all the time: is 300k HHI rich? Is 300k middle class in DC? Why 300-400k HHI isn’t enough to “feel” rich and so on with people arguing back and forth.
Why the constant focus on income? It obscures the real issue, imo, which is that “feeling” rich = knowing what’s in your bank account. I would hazard to guess that the average American wouldn’t “feel” rich without at least $3-5 million in savings/investments, excluding their primary residence (because you have to live somewhere and with housing so inflated, most can’t or don’t want to downsize).
Anonymous wrote:Not another of these tiresome threads.
If you can't afford a Park Ave coop or a Beverly Hills mansion or equivalent, you ain't rich. It's that simple. You're just a better off member of the middle classes. There's a reason why you're called upper middle class. If you can't charter a jet tomorrow and fly off for a Botswana safari and not miss a single dime of the cost, you ain't rich. As F. Scott Fitzgerald said, the rich are different from you and me.
Sheesh, the delusions people go through to pretend they're rich with their 40k salary and 250k savings![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not another of these tiresome threads.
If you can't afford a Park Ave coop or a Beverly Hills mansion or equivalent, you ain't rich. It's that simple. You're just a better off member of the middle classes. There's a reason why you're called upper middle class. If you can't charter a jet tomorrow and fly off for a Botswana safari and not miss a single dime of the cost, you ain't rich. As F. Scott Fitzgerald said, the rich are different from you and me.
Sheesh, the delusions people go through to pretend they're rich with their 40k salary and 250k savings![]()
Lol, you're a snob and a bore. The question is about FEELING rich. There's no wrong answer here.