Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, you can check item one off your list: posting your humblebrag on DCUM.
Oh, come on. Don't hate. Congratulations, OP. Personally, I'd go to the spa.
Anonymous wrote:Send me $100,000. Then you'll fall back below the 1 Million mark and have the opportunity to celebrate again, preferably the same way!
Anonymous wrote:This morning, when I did my monthly check-in on finances, our net worth surpassed $1 million! 20 years ago, I was flat broke - literally no money in the bank, no car, and about $12K in debt with student loans. Since then, I have steadily worked and my income has increased from about $30K/year to $120K/year, I got married and we had three kids, and now at 46 and 45 years old, my DH and I are maybe millionaires (I might be 'cheating' with the net worth as it includes about $180K in college savings and $195K in home equity.). I know that this is nothing compared to lots of DCUMers, but it feels like a real accomplishment, especially since my husband only started working last year, so we have accumulated almost all of it on a single salary.
So do we celebrate with some kind of splurge? A nice weekend away? A luxury purchase? At the very least, our family is going out to a nice dinner tonight!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This morning, when I did my monthly check-in on finances, our net worth surpassed $1 million! 20 years ago, I was flat broke - literally no money in the bank, no car, and about $12K in debt with student loans. Since then, I have steadily worked and my income has increased from about $30K/year to $120K/year, I got married and we had three kids, and now at 46 and 45 years old, my DH and I are maybe millionaires (I might be 'cheating' with the net worth as it includes about $180K in college savings and $195K in home equity.). I know that this is nothing compared to lots of DCUMers, but it feels like a real accomplishment, especially since my husband only started working last year, so we have accumulated almost all of it on a single salary.
So do we celebrate with some kind of splurge? A nice weekend away? A luxury purchase? At the very least, our family is going out to a nice dinner tonight!
Congrats. But...
How the F do we know what your family will enjoy? Are you as boring as you sound?
And make sure you write a check to charity. Even if it's 10K.
OP here. I probably am boring, but this question was also worded poorly. Wasn't looking for specific suggestions, just questioning whether we should do something. As with my previous post, really appreciating the donation idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This morning, when I did my monthly check-in on finances, our net worth surpassed $1 million! 20 years ago, I was flat broke - literally no money in the bank, no car, and about $12K in debt with student loans. Since then, I have steadily worked and my income has increased from about $30K/year to $120K/year, I got married and we had three kids, and now at 46 and 45 years old, my DH and I are maybe millionaires (I might be 'cheating' with the net worth as it includes about $180K in college savings and $195K in home equity.). I know that this is nothing compared to lots of DCUMers, but it feels like a real accomplishment, especially since my husband only started working last year, so we have accumulated almost all of it on a single salary.
So do we celebrate with some kind of splurge? A nice weekend away? A luxury purchase? At the very least, our family is going out to a nice dinner tonight!
Congrats. But...
How the F do we know what your family will enjoy? Are you as boring as you sound?
And make sure you write a check to charity. Even if it's 10K.
OP here. I probably am boring, but this question was also worded poorly. Wasn't looking for specific suggestions, just questioning whether we should do something. As with my previous post, really appreciating the donation idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This morning, when I did my monthly check-in on finances, our net worth surpassed $1 million! 20 years ago, I was flat broke - literally no money in the bank, no car, and about $12K in debt with student loans. Since then, I have steadily worked and my income has increased from about $30K/year to $120K/year, I got married and we had three kids, and now at 46 and 45 years old, my DH and I are maybe millionaires (I might be 'cheating' with the net worth as it includes about $180K in college savings and $195K in home equity.). I know that this is nothing compared to lots of DCUMers, but it feels like a real accomplishment, especially since my husband only started working last year, so we have accumulated almost all of it on a single salary.
So do we celebrate with some kind of splurge? A nice weekend away? A luxury purchase? At the very least, our family is going out to a nice dinner tonight!
Congrats. But...
How the F do we know what your family will enjoy? Are you as boring as you sound?
And make sure you write a check to charity. Even if it's 10K.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't you celebrate by sending a nice check to the United Nations World Food Programme? I'm not being snarky. It would probable make you feel great, and give a longer lasting sense of well being than an expensive dinner.
http://www.wfp.org
Anonymous wrote:This morning, when I did my monthly check-in on finances, our net worth surpassed $1 million! 20 years ago, I was flat broke - literally no money in the bank, no car, and about $12K in debt with student loans. Since then, I have steadily worked and my income has increased from about $30K/year to $120K/year, I got married and we had three kids, and now at 46 and 45 years old, my DH and I are maybe millionaires (I might be 'cheating' with the net worth as it includes about $180K in college savings and $195K in home equity.). I know that this is nothing compared to lots of DCUMers, but it feels like a real accomplishment, especially since my husband only started working last year, so we have accumulated almost all of it on a single salary.
So do we celebrate with some kind of splurge? A nice weekend away? A luxury purchase? At the very least, our family is going out to a nice dinner tonight!