Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you are living well beyond your means. I’m not sure what you want here. Most people with two “good careers” can afford a house, including a down payment. You seem very entitled which may be your parents’ “reason.”
I’m not living beyond my means. I don’t have any debt. I wake up everyday and live a good life. My kids are getting an excellent education.
I guess I’m wondering why more people don’t do this and I think the answer is they get trapped in home ownership. In New York people don’t worry about buying, they just take advantage of the opportunities they have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can remediate the feeling of weirdness by cutting your spending and saving enough to buy the house you want with a 30-yr mortgage.
Take my kids out of private school and stop saving for retirement… yeah, hard pass there Suze Orman!
Good for you, OP. I’m really happy for you that your parents are able to support your current lifestyle. I don’t know why they wanted to support college and not a down payment. Maybe you should ask them that, especially since you are counting on an inheritance from them to continue living as you do. Maybe they don’t understand how insecure it makes you feel to not have been given money for a down payment, since you are unable or unwilling to save for one. Sorry, OP! Sounds tough but I’m glad you’re t trying to make the best of it. You shouldn’t have to sacrifice to save for either college or a down payment when your parents have it. That would be a sad life, to have to balance priorities like that. I don’t understand how people live like that!

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your point?
I dunno. What’s the point of any of this discussion.
I feel like it’s weird, but also don’t feel financially like I’m in trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you are living well beyond your means. I’m not sure what you want here. Most people with two “good careers” can afford a house, including a down payment. You seem very entitled which may be your parents’ “reason.”
I’m not living beyond my means. I don’t have any debt. I wake up everyday and live a good life. My kids are getting an excellent education.
I guess I’m wondering why more people don’t do this and I think the answer is they get trapped in home ownership. In New York people don’t worry about buying, they just take advantage of the opportunities they have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you are living well beyond your means. I’m not sure what you want here. Most people with two “good careers” can afford a house, including a down payment. You seem very entitled which may be your parents’ “reason.”
I’m not living beyond my means. I don’t have any debt. I wake up everyday and live a good life. My kids are getting an excellent education.
I guess I’m wondering why more people don’t do this and I think the answer is they get trapped in home ownership. In New York people don’t worry about buying, they just take advantage of the opportunities they have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can remediate the feeling of weirdness by cutting your spending and saving enough to buy the house you want with a 30-yr mortgage.
Take my kids out of private school and stop saving for retirement… yeah, hard pass there Suze Orman!
Good for you, OP. I’m really happy for you that your parents are able to support your current lifestyle. I don’t know why they wanted to support college and not a down payment. Maybe you should ask them that, especially since you are counting on an inheritance from them to continue living as you do. Maybe they don’t understand how insecure it makes you feel to not have been given money for a down payment, since you are unable or unwilling to save for one. Sorry, OP! Sounds tough but I’m glad you’re t trying to make the best of it. You shouldn’t have to sacrifice to save for either college or a down payment when your parents have it. That would be a sad life, to have to balance priorities like that. I don’t understand how people live like that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can remediate the feeling of weirdness by cutting your spending and saving enough to buy the house you want with a 30-yr mortgage.
Take my kids out of private school and stop saving for retirement… yeah, hard pass there Suze Orman!