Anonymous wrote:I respect this lifestyle and OPs discipline, considering that she is a young and single woman.
What I resent is that she assumes this is sustainable - even easy - to maintain as a non-single person with more life piled upon her. I concur with PPs that day care, health care, housing, and the general complications of a more complicated life will threaten her ability to maintain this strict disciplined lifestyle. In many ways it seems like such a strictly managed financial existence would be easier to maintain if she stays home and lives on one income (or if her DH stays home). So we'll see how life goes. Much of his is irrelevant to parents in the DC area. And I say this as a dual-income family who is truly low-middle-class at about $120K a year, and doing mostly fine but not saving much.
No Anonymous wrote:Single Guy here early 30s
Expenses
Group House Rent 600
Gas 100
Car Fund 100
Groceries 200
Insurance 100
Phone/Internet/Netflix 100
Weekend 400 (100 per weekend)
Total expenses roughly 1500 a month
Retirement 1,600 a month
Total roughly 3,000 per month can get by on around 50k a year after taxes
Income much more than that but thats beside the point
Once married
Mort age 3000 +2500
Daycare +2500 (peak with 2 kids)
Food 600 +400
Weekend fun 800 +400
Car 200 +100
Gas 100 +100
New Total Expense 4,000 up to 6500 with kids
Retirement 3,000
Total 7,000 to 10,500 = HHI of 100 to 150k after taxes
Feel free to chime in on what I am missing
Anonymous wrote:
Reviving this to say....
"no debt (parents paid for my undergraduate education at a small, cheap state university, and then I went to a third tier law school at around 90% scholarship and my grandparents chipping in for the rest + living expenses)."
STFU.
I have to agree. You know why I never went to graduate school? I had to work and pay rent. And my student loans which... actually mostly I didn't pay them. Oops. Bad call, but it was really a choice of, "do I pay my rent, or my loans?"
I married a lawyer and now we have his student loans--about 800/month--until the end of time. We are very fortunate, but I don't scrimp and save anymore because frankly, after twenty years of doing so I have decided that life is too damn short and precious to be entirely focused on saving, saving saving for the future you can't predict. You know the problem with savings? A lay off and cobra eats them. The market fluctuates and your 401K is down 30%. It's all a shell game. If you enjoy living carefully, go for it. But realize that at some point, roommates get really fucking old, and a diet of lentils and pasta and kale even more so.
Anonymous wrote:WHERE DO YOU LIVE IN DC THAT COSTS 1200/month???!!! Must be a house share....
Anonymous wrote:
Reviving this to say....
"no debt (parents paid for my undergraduate education at a small, cheap state university, and then I went to a third tier law school at around 90% scholarship and my grandparents chipping in for the rest + living expenses)."
STFU.
I have to agree. You know why I never went to graduate school? I had to work and pay rent. And my student loans which... actually mostly I didn't pay them. Oops. Bad call, but it was really a choice of, "do I pay my rent, or my loans?"
I married a lawyer and now we have his student loans--about 800/month--until the end of time. We are very fortunate, but I don't scrimp and save anymore because frankly, after twenty years of doing so I have decided that life is too damn short and precious to be entirely focused on saving, saving saving for the future you can't predict. You know the problem with savings? A lay off and cobra eats them. The market fluctuates and your 401K is down 30%. It's all a shell game. If you enjoy living carefully, go for it. But realize that at some point, roommates get really fucking old, and a diet of lentils and pasta and kale even more so.
Reviving this to say....
"no debt (parents paid for my undergraduate education at a small, cheap state university, and then I went to a third tier law school at around 90% scholarship and my grandparents chipping in for the rest + living expenses)."
STFU.
Anonymous wrote:And I don't find my lifestyle boring at all.Fun and happiness does not come from spending money.
Okay really, good night!