Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty sure I'm one of only two people in my school (I'm a teacher) with a paid off house, and at least 50 people work there, many with advanced degrees, and some with decades in the district. The only other person who has paid theirs off is early 60s and will be retiring soon. They paid theirs off this month.
I'm early 30s and we paid it off in our 20s.
Okay, but you recognize that this is extremely rare, right? In my 20's I was into putting more into my house due to security desires, by my 30's I realized how much more my investments were making than I was paying in mortgage interest so I happily pay my mortgage and watch my investments grow.
Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty sure I'm one of only two people in my school (I'm a teacher) with a paid off house, and at least 50 people work there, many with advanced degrees, and some with decades in the district. The only other person who has paid theirs off is early 60s and will be retiring soon. They paid theirs off this month.
I'm early 30s and we paid it off in our 20s.
Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty sure I'm one of only two people in my school (I'm a teacher) with a paid off house, and at least 50 people work there, many with advanced degrees, and some with decades in the district. The only other person who has paid theirs off is early 60s and will be retiring soon. They paid theirs off this month.
I'm early 30s and we paid it off in our 20s.
Anonymous wrote:A home with no mortgage isn't the only sign of wealth. It could be a sign...or it could be that you're middle class and that's where you put your savings or it could be that you got a one time chunk of money and used it for that or it could be that you were gifted money to pay it off or it could be that your mother in law, who lives with you, put her money into it.
There are a lot of reasons a mortgage may or may not be paid off and whether it is or isn't necessarily going to tell you if someone is wealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The older generation knows how to be rich and act poor: my parents (in their 70s) are worth at least 15M+ and literally wear sneakers from Costco until they have holes in them. They drive cars until they are well over 15-18 years old. They cut coupons. They eat at Applebee's, if they eat out at all. They clean their own house, mow their own lawn, and basically refuse to pay for a single service or convenience.
They are also well-educated and when they were in their 40s and making 7 figures they were more flashy, but they grew up working class and in their old age they've found that's what makes them happy. They are also really paranoid about spending money and so they hoard.
THAT is hiding your wealth.
NO No... THAT is being cheap..
Agree. I am cheap. I was always cheap and I will continue being cheap.
Do you truly know rich friends driving cars made in 1999? That's astonishing to me.
If one can call themselves a friend, I do.
Honestly, if your parents were making 7 figure incomes 30 years ago, and they live really frugally, they should be worth WAY more than $15M by now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The older generation knows how to be rich and act poor: my parents (in their 70s) are worth at least 15M+ and literally wear sneakers from Costco until they have holes in them. They drive cars until they are well over 15-18 years old. They cut coupons. They eat at Applebee's, if they eat out at all. They clean their own house, mow their own lawn, and basically refuse to pay for a single service or convenience.
They are also well-educated and when they were in their 40s and making 7 figures they were more flashy, but they grew up working class and in their old age they've found that's what makes them happy. They are also really paranoid about spending money and so they hoard.
THAT is hiding your wealth.
NO No... THAT is being cheap..
Agree. I am cheap. I was always cheap and I will continue being cheap.
Do you truly know rich friends driving cars made in 1999? That's astonishing to me.
If one can call themselves a friend, I do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The older generation knows how to be rich and act poor: my parents (in their 70s) are worth at least 15M+ and literally wear sneakers from Costco until they have holes in them. They drive cars until they are well over 15-18 years old. They cut coupons. They eat at Applebee's, if they eat out at all. They clean their own house, mow their own lawn, and basically refuse to pay for a single service or convenience.
They are also well-educated and when they were in their 40s and making 7 figures they were more flashy, but they grew up working class and in their old age they've found that's what makes them happy. They are also really paranoid about spending money and so they hoard.
THAT is hiding your wealth.
NO No... THAT is being cheap..
Agree. I am cheap. I was always cheap and I will continue being cheap.
Do you truly know rich friends driving cars made in 1999? That's astonishing to me.