Anonymous wrote:Officially $0. However, my parents put money in an investment account for me when I was born. For 26 years the stock paid dividends and was reinvested. Occassionally they added to the investment account for holidays and my birthday. I cashed it out for my downpayment. It was worth about $50K.
Anonymous wrote:worked out for you nicelyAnonymous wrote:
I grew up around here, always worked or interned in the summers. After college, I lived at home for about 9 months while paying rent to my parents and paying all my bills on my own. I was working on the Hill. For those 9 months, I saved up a small emergency fund and waited to find the right rental group house. I stayed in that group house, while still working on the Hill, still paying all my own bills (didn't even have a family cell phone plan) for about 3.5 years.
Then my parents loaned me $100K for my down payment (with interest) to buy my first house. That was their offer, and I never expected it in a million years as they have always been on the self-sufficiency side of the spectrum. At the time I bought, I was making 40K and I had two roommates join me in the house. Lived there with roommates for 11 years.
It was the "paying rent to parents" that gave me the jump I needed to move out. I realized that with what I was paying I could live on my own, so I rented a room. They were very angry with me, but I moved out anyway. I was not even allowed to take my bedroom furniture.
I did not let that stop me. So I stayed in the rented room with a mattress on the floor.
worked out for you nicelyAnonymous wrote:
I grew up around here, always worked or interned in the summers. After college, I lived at home for about 9 months while paying rent to my parents and paying all my bills on my own. I was working on the Hill. For those 9 months, I saved up a small emergency fund and waited to find the right rental group house. I stayed in that group house, while still working on the Hill, still paying all my own bills (didn't even have a family cell phone plan) for about 3.5 years.
Then my parents loaned me $100K for my down payment (with interest) to buy my first house. That was their offer, and I never expected it in a million years as they have always been on the self-sufficiency side of the spectrum. At the time I bought, I was making 40K and I had two roommates join me in the house. Lived there with roommates for 11 years.
Anonymous wrote:My close friends know much more about my sex life than my finances

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not a single one of our friends, even those the closest to us know our second house was gift from my parents. It's a very modest house just outside the beltway, so nothing extravagant. Something we would have bought on our own if we hadn't been horribly upside down on our first house in the outer burbs. My parents gifted each of us kids the same amount. Basically we got our inheritance early.
Why on earth would we share this info with anyone? I really don't understand why people share that info with their friends.
I have some friends who are an open book. They know my salary exactly, they know my networth, etc. I know theirs. Each year we compete for who can have the greatest net worth increase in % terms. He with the largest increase takes everyone out for dinner. It's silly, but fun, and frankly a decent way to motivate each other to save - while also comparing how we do. One guy has blown past us with his $600K a year no kids income - so we are thinking we need to adjust the formula a bit, but its cool.