Anonymous wrote:My 2 cents - personal care is low; my highlights are $300/month add botox, fillers, skincare etc. Clothes $ super high; food about right. House cleaning about right. Cars high but I HATE spending $ on cars and cars in general.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your budget seems eerily similar to ours. It doesn’t seem like we live extravagantly, but I guess that is relative.
OP here. Tell me more! Was it budget creep as your income went up?
Anyway, it's not that we *need* to cut back, as we are continuing to save a lot of money. But I do sometimes have a moment of thinking, holy hell, 18K a month, how did I get here?!?
The person who said we don't really say "no" is spot on. We don't really say "no" because of money. We DO say "no" to our kids all the time for other reasons, and I certainly don't buy things when I think I wouldn't use it, but if I want something, I buy it.
I guess I can't decide if this is how I want to live, or if it's worth cutting back, mostly so I remember how to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Your budget seems eerily similar to ours. It doesn’t seem like we live extravagantly, but I guess that is relative.
Anonymous wrote:I have two kids in a lot of activities, plus I sock aside money each month for summer camps, and together that totals $1000/mo, so I think that's reasonable.
I do think $500 mo for clothes for kids is way out of line.
And food is high. Groceries could easily be 1500 without feeling a pinch.
But clearly showing is just too high.
Essentially when I look at your budget I just don't see where you ever say no. No we don't need that, or not right now, or let's buy this but wait for a sale or save up for it.
You're just mindlessly spending. You can afford it obviously, but maybe try just saying no. Do I WANT this or do I NEED this? How can I get this cheaper?
If you want, clearly you don't need to, but if you wanted you could easily save 2K out of your budget without feeling much of a squeeze, I think. It's easier to throw money at every problem you have, I get that. But, I mean really this is an excessive amount of purchasing. It's kind of gross. Think of the environment, if nothing else, or the example you are setting for your children. You are on a consumer hamster wheel.
Anonymous wrote:another humble bragging thread?