Anonymous wrote:Looking here and the numerous send ups of Boomers on insta , I am here to say that most millennials are entirely unschooled as to who the Boomers were. Boomers are constantly confused with my parents' generation. None of this is true- about anything- housing, jobs, pensions, inflation, anything.
Anonymous wrote:Looking here and the numerous send ups of Boomers on insta , I am here to say that most millennials are entirely unschooled as to who the Boomers were. Boomers are constantly confused with my parents' generation. None of this is true- about anything- housing, jobs, pensions, inflation, anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s the Boomer’s America, the rest of us just live in it.
You are absolutely wrong. I graduated college in the worst recession. Rationed gas, lines for miles to even get some. No jobs at all. Interest rates for mortgages were in the high teens, dropped over 2 decades slowly. We lived in apts, then THs , and either stayed there or bought a bigger place when we were READY and not everyone did, and the place wasn't huge. We were public servants- much lower salary and far less govt promotions, but we didn't travel to Europe, we bought used cars, our kids didn't go to pricey camps, but they had college paid for- because we saved. No, we didn't have marble anything, or the newest reno, but our house was great. We both have multiple degrees, but we knew that did not translate to large salaries. We got over that and focused on what mattered.
No, I am not feeling the need to sell my hard earned and lived in house to you. Sorry.
They had college paid for because it was a fraction of what it is today because it was heavily subsidized. You boomers cut funding. You voted yourself nice pensions and gold plated health insurance benefits. Do you think we get any of that? Think we will ever see a pension? You also take out far more in social security than you will ever put in, Boomer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s the Boomer’s America, the rest of us just live in it.
You are absolutely wrong. I graduated college in the worst recession. Rationed gas, lines for miles to even get some. No jobs at all. Interest rates for mortgages were in the high teens, dropped over 2 decades slowly. We lived in apts, then THs , and either stayed there or bought a bigger place when we were READY and not everyone did, and the place wasn't huge. We were public servants- much lower salary and far less govt promotions, but we didn't travel to Europe, we bought used cars, our kids didn't go to pricey camps, but they had college paid for- because we saved. No, we didn't have marble anything, or the newest reno, but our house was great. We both have multiple degrees, but we knew that did not translate to large salaries. We got over that and focused on what mattered.
No, I am not feeling the need to sell my hard earned and lived in house to you. Sorry.
This thread was stated by an entitled boomer. I hope you're directing your rudeness to your generation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s the Boomer’s America, the rest of us just live in it.
You are absolutely wrong. I graduated college in the worst recession. Rationed gas, lines for miles to even get some. No jobs at all. Interest rates for mortgages were in the high teens, dropped over 2 decades slowly. We lived in apts, then THs , and either stayed there or bought a bigger place when we were READY and not everyone did, and the place wasn't huge. We were public servants- much lower salary and far less govt promotions, but we didn't travel to Europe, we bought used cars, our kids didn't go to pricey camps, but they had college paid for- because we saved. No, we didn't have marble anything, or the newest reno, but our house was great. We both have multiple degrees, but we knew that did not translate to large salaries. We got over that and focused on what mattered.
No, I am not feeling the need to sell my hard earned and lived in house to you. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s the Boomer’s America, the rest of us just live in it.
You are absolutely wrong. I graduated college in the worst recession. Rationed gas, lines for miles to even get some. No jobs at all. Interest rates for mortgages were in the high teens, dropped over 2 decades slowly. We lived in apts, then THs , and either stayed there or bought a bigger place when we were READY and not everyone did, and the place wasn't huge. We were public servants- much lower salary and far less govt promotions, but we didn't travel to Europe, we bought used cars, our kids didn't go to pricey camps, but they had college paid for- because we saved. No, we didn't have marble anything, or the newest reno, but our house was great. We both have multiple degrees, but we knew that did not translate to large salaries. We got over that and focused on what mattered.
No, I am not feeling the need to sell my hard earned and lived in house to you. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, don't worry. Housing crash is coming. Wait for it.
People have been saying this on here since 2012. It’s not happening.
Anonymous wrote:One problem Boomers have is that they are super picky. It's pretty typical with age. But when the market is tight, you can't be that picky.
If you've been living in a house that you have renovated to your specifications several times over 40 years, it is very hard to shop for a smaller house where you are pretty much definitely going to have to accept some imperfections, especially if you don't want to go through more renovations.
My parents are currently shopping for a retirement home, but they want 3 bedrooms (but under 2k sq ft), a two car garage, all one level, and everything updated. They have a healthy budget ($1m, this is not the DMV but a similarly low-inventory, HCOL place), but they are struggling to find all that and feeling disappointed. But... that's what it's like to buy a house these days. They just haven't done it in a long time.
What's funny is that a few years back when WE were house hunting, my parents rolled their eyes at us when we expressed frustration with what was on the market. Now they get it.
Anonymous wrote:It’s the Boomer’s America, the rest of us just live in it.
Anonymous wrote:The young today aren’t nearly as cheap and miserly I was to get ahead financially.
The easiest and laziest way to get wealthy is to save and invest down to the penny. Never eat out, zero subscriptions, no travel, no A/C, Pump it into index funds. If a car is necessary nothing higher priced than a Mitsubishi Mirage. If single share rent with housemates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Typical boomers. Want top dollar for the home they're in now, but want to land somewhere nice and cheap.
Typical GenZ/X/Y - want to land somewhere nice, but it also has to be cheap.
Most of the houses boomers are selling are really not all that nice. Trying to pass a 20 year old kitchen reno as a recent update, for example. But options are limited right now so it’s more about finding something acceptable within a reasonable budget (“cheap” was in 2008, nothing is cheap anymore).
A 20 year old kitchen Reno? Try a kitchen that hasn’t been touched since 1994 + wallpaper borders in every bedroom and bathroom!
Yep. We bought our current house and renovated it top to bottom because the boomers who lived here before either hadn’t touched things in 25 years, or did crappy DIY repairs that made things worse.