Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where did you get the idea that it was supposed to be easy?
I see
Nice neighborhood are not for everyone
"But I deserve to live there! To be amongst my people!"
And, "everybody else who has done better than me in life benefitted from generational wealth! It's not my fault I don't earn much. It's not my fault I opted for a worthless educational credential. It's not my fault I don't want to work too hard. It's not my fault I had a bunch of kids early in life and can't easily support them. It's not my fault I don't prioritize saving and investing over self-indulgence because, you know, YOLO, etc".
Anonymous wrote:Nearly everyone making enough to buy in McLean or Bethesda is 35+ and probably 40+. By then you can barely even have kids. If you’re of actual child bearing age you’re probably too broke to comfortably raise a family. Every couple I’ve known who has a SFH in a good zip code and has kids before 30 in this area comes from a UHNW family and buys a house that is 10-20x their annual salary. How many folks under 35 are actually buying 2-3M houses completely on their own without generational wealth? It’s not zero but pretty damn close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where did you get the idea that it was supposed to be easy?
I see
Nice neighborhood are not for everyone
"But I deserve to live there! To be amongst my people!"
And, "everybody else who has done better than me in life benefitted from generational wealth! It's not my fault I don't earn much. It's not my fault I opted for a worthless educational credential. It's not my fault I don't want to work too hard. It's not my fault I had a bunch of kids early in life and can't easily support them. It's not my fault I don't prioritize saving and investing over self-indulgence because, you know, YOLO, etc".
Anonymous wrote:^raising not aiding
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where did you get the idea that it was supposed to be easy?
I see
Nice neighborhood are not for everyone
"But I deserve to live there! To be amongst my people!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where did you get the idea that it was supposed to be easy?
I see
Nice neighborhood are not for everyone
Anonymous wrote:Where did you get the idea that it was supposed to be easy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:7 pages in and everyone is contributing their own version of “screw you, I got mine” while ignoring OP was focused on those under 35 buying $2-3M homes.
We get that many of you saved aggressively and traded up between mid 30s to 50s. You all keep repeating the same story that ironically was only possible for most of you because of unprecedented property appreciation in this country since 2008. Yet you all think you’re brilliant for benefitting from a macroeconomic trend.
How many PP’s bought a $2-3M home under 35 with kids without parental support or a trust in the DC area?
My 28-year-old son and his 27-year-old wife just purchased a $2M home in McLean with $1.2M down and an $800K mortgage. He graduated in 2020 and is currently working as a senior software engineer for Amazon for a cool $350K/year. His wife graduated in 2021 and is currently working for Google for a cool $300K/year. They got married in 2020 and lived with my wife and me for five years to save the $1.2M down payment (with some luck in the stock market) prior to purchasing the home. They plan on paying off the mortgage in the next two years. It is not that difficult.
Do you have a guest house? It would be a cold day in hell that I would agree to live with my in laws or future daughter or son in law. Share a kitchen, family room, and laundry room? Have sex with them down the hallway?
They lived in our guest house, which features a full kitchen, family room, and laundry room. Fortunately, we spend our winters in Florida and Vietnam and travel extensively between spring and fall, so we really only saw them during the summer. FWIW, I get along great with my daughter-in-law; she has actually been my younger daughter's best friend since first grade.
This is the funniest possible contribution to try to negate the premise that you need generational wealth to pull off what your son and DIL pulled off. "You don't need generational wealth! Just live for five years rent free in your parents' guest house with a full kitchen, family room, and laundry room, conveniently located near your top-3%-salary duel jobs! It just takes those kind of 'good decisions,' not generational wealth!"
I mean, if this is a troll it's why trolling was invented. Chef's kiss.