Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this thread clearly shows that most people think $2.5 million is rich and set for life.
Most people could happily live the rest of their lives with this. Especially if they are willing to move. Working is optional, not required.
Some people say this is not enough. Those people probably want expensive homes, private school, luxury vacations, etc. etc.
So the final answer is that this is rich for most people, but not all.
See that's really the rub. Most of the people who think this is rich don't actually have that kind of money. If they did, they would either run through it and be poor again (see below link re lottery winners), or, if they are smart, they would come to the realization that $2.5M is not really rich.
http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/05/17/18323470-what-could-happen-to-you-tales-of-big-lottery-winners
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe this is running to 12 pages already.
OP, the answer to your original question is "yes." Happy Thanksgiving!
wrong
It's 5 million
"Fully 60 percent of those worth $5 million or more said they're wealthy, while only 28 percent of those worth $1 million to $5 million said they were wealthy (those were the only two categories given)."
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100904381
With 450k HHI
http://money.cnn.com/2012/12/31/news/economy/fiscal-cliff-rich/
That's what THEY think. According to the Subject line, OP wanted to know what *I* think. And since s/he is asking, the answer is "yes."
Telling someone that they are rich doesn't make them rich, it's how you feel and how comfortable you are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe this is running to 12 pages already.
OP, the answer to your original question is "yes." Happy Thanksgiving!
wrong
It's 5 million
"Fully 60 percent of those worth $5 million or more said they're wealthy, while only 28 percent of those worth $1 million to $5 million said they were wealthy (those were the only two categories given)."
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100904381
With 450k HHI
http://money.cnn.com/2012/12/31/news/economy/fiscal-cliff-rich/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this thread clearly shows that most people think $2.5 million is rich and set for life.
Most people could happily live the rest of their lives with this. Especially if they are willing to move. Working is optional, not required.
Some people say this is not enough. Those people probably want expensive homes, private school, luxury vacations, etc. etc.
So the final answer is that this is rich for most people, but not all.
You are not set for life with $2.5M in this area, unless you live very frugally. Which can be difficult as having that much in the bank is awfully tempting...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe this is running to 12 pages already.
OP, the answer to your original question is "yes." Happy Thanksgiving!
wrong
It's 5 million
"Fully 60 percent of those worth $5 million or more said they're wealthy, while only 28 percent of those worth $1 million to $5 million said they were wealthy (those were the only two categories given)."
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100904381
With 450k HHI
http://money.cnn.com/2012/12/31/news/economy/fiscal-cliff-rich/
That's what THEY think. According to the Subject line, OP wanted to know what *I* think. And since s/he is asking, the answer is "yes."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't believe this is running to 12 pages already.
OP, the answer to your original question is "yes." Happy Thanksgiving!
wrong
It's 5 million
"Fully 60 percent of those worth $5 million or more said they're wealthy, while only 28 percent of those worth $1 million to $5 million said they were wealthy (those were the only two categories given)."
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100904381
With 450k HHI
http://money.cnn.com/2012/12/31/news/economy/fiscal-cliff-rich/
Anonymous wrote:Can't believe this is running to 12 pages already.
OP, the answer to your original question is "yes." Happy Thanksgiving!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this thread clearly shows that most people think $2.5 million is rich and set for life.
Most people could happily live the rest of their lives with this. Especially if they are willing to move. Working is optional, not required.
Some people say this is not enough. Those people probably want expensive homes, private school, luxury vacations, etc. etc.
So the final answer is that this is rich for most people, but not all.
See that's really the rub. Most of the people who think this is rich don't actually have that kind of money. If they did, they would either run through it and be poor again (see below link re lottery winners), or, if they are smart, they would come to the realization that $2.5M is not really rich.
http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/05/17/18323470-what-could-happen-to-you-tales-of-big-lottery-winners
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this thread clearly shows that most people think $2.5 million is rich and set for life.
Most people could happily live the rest of their lives with this. Especially if they are willing to move. Working is optional, not required.
Some people say this is not enough. Those people probably want expensive homes, private school, luxury vacations, etc. etc.
So the final answer is that this is rich for most people, but not all.
See that's really the rub. Most of the people who think this is rich don't actually have that kind of money. If they did, they would either run through it and be poor again (see below link re lottery winners), or, if they are smart, they would come to the realization that $2.5M is not really rich.
http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/05/17/18323470-what-could-happen-to-you-tales-of-big-lottery-winners
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. All your comments have been so interesting. I don't consider myself a shrewd real estate investor- it is true that we just got lucky. My point remains that while 2.5 million is a lot of money (regardless of how we acquired it), we live a middle class lifestyle. Ie: older cars, use coupons, shop at target and buy things on sale/clearance, minimal eating old, use hand-me-downs, 1 modest vacation/year, kids in public schools, the list goes on.
I'm not saying we don't have more money saved than others here, but our lifestyle is middle class. We will keep working until our youngest is done with college. So we're not living much differently than most people.
OP, this is getting so old. Can't you realize that it doesn't matter how you choose to live - it's that you HAVE THE CHOICE to live the way you choose. You have a safety net. A big safety net! That's being rich. I personally don't define rich as not having to work - I define it as not having to worry. And you clearly don't have to worry. You could take your millions, move to an area with a much lower cost of living - and live comfortably for the rest of your (and your kids') lives. Many of us don't have the option of doing that - but again, being rich isn't relative - it doesn't matter what "many of us" have or don't have to define your level of richness.
Anonymous wrote:"Sorry that's middle class
Rich means you can buy above and beyond, don't shop at the normal stores (think Tysons 2, whole foods only,) have staff that does your cleaning, cooking, driving, shopping etc..'
And that's the problem we have here. People have a truly distorted version of what it means to be middle class. True financial security with luxuries and savings is NOT middle class.
Y'all need to stop watching the Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous. Those kinds of incomes are outliers. The top 1% of the top 1% is irrelevant.
If you make in the top 5% of income, you are rich. Sorry. Get this through your heads:Some people having more than you does not make you not rich, just as some people people making less than 10,000 a year does not make the 10K earners not poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot bring myself to read these pages and pages of postings on the frivolous question of whether a net worth of $2,500,000 makes you rich.
The answer, OP, to either your humble brag or clueless inquiry is "yes". You are wealthy, wealthier in fact, than most every other person in this country and certainly in this world. If someone were to submit this thread to the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, or the Louisville Courier-Journal, the readers of those papers would probably be dismayed to know that the citizens of our capital, on whose shoulders so many important decisions, legislation, and policy-making rests, live in such a bubble of comfort and affluent competitiveness, so out of touch with most people.
I will share this story so that you can appreciate your wealth even more. Several months ago, I attended my volunteer day at an organization that provides the very poorest children in our surrounding communities with essentials for home and school, socks and underwear, soap and shampoo, hairbrushes and toothbrushes, books and backpacks, uniforms and coats. One little 3d grade girl put on her jumper and twirled around in delight as she told us "my mother will be so happy, she always wanted me to have one of these but we could not buy it." Another 2d or 3d grade child, a severely handicapped-at-birth girl who was partially blind, wore hearing aids, walked with crutches, and could speak very little, broke into applause and an enormous smile when we fitted her with a brand new, white polo shirt. It is very humbling and completely emotional when someone to whom the world has given so little, and who fate has dealt such a very difficult hand, is so appreciative of a little thing like a new shirt.
I agree that this thread is very out of touch, no wonder people refer to this area as living in the bubble. I can read the paper headline now: Washingtonians Disappear, Likely Absorbed by Themselves
LOL!!
Double Word to both posts. Your richness is not defined by what you don't have; it is defined by what you do have. And OP has a lot. This insistence that there are super billionaires out there, therefore, you are not rich, is tone deaf. And disingenuous.
Our HHI is 300K. We have some investments, though not in the millions. We are in the top 5% of local incomes. I feel pretty rich because 1. I have savings (retirement and college) 2. healthcare 3. Luxuries (not the Hope Diamond, but nice things) 4. I never have to worry about how my bills will be paid.
How I may be able to live in the future is not relevant to the now. For now, I am rich.
Sorry that's middle class
Rich means you can buy above and beyond, don't shop at the normal stores (think Tysons 2, whole foods only,) have staff that does your cleaning, cooking, driving, shopping etc...
Anonymous wrote:OP here. All your comments have been so interesting. I don't consider myself a shrewd real estate investor- it is true that we just got lucky. My point remains that while 2.5 million is a lot of money (regardless of how we acquired it), we live a middle class lifestyle. Ie: older cars, use coupons, shop at target and buy things on sale/clearance, minimal eating old, use hand-me-downs, 1 modest vacation/year, kids in public schools, the list goes on.
I'm not saying we don't have more money saved than others here, but our lifestyle is middle class. We will keep working until our youngest is done with college. So we're not living much differently than most people.
Anonymous wrote:I think this thread clearly shows that most people think $2.5 million is rich and set for life.
Most people could happily live the rest of their lives with this. Especially if they are willing to move. Working is optional, not required.
Some people say this is not enough. Those people probably want expensive homes, private school, luxury vacations, etc. etc.
So the final answer is that this is rich for most people, but not all.