Anonymous wrote:Everyone is giving you practical answers OP, but this is likely actually something much deeper.
Have you experienced financial precariousness in the past where things went upside down financially for you or your parents when you were a child? You may have some trauma there.
Have you ever been punished in some way for your success? For example a boss being threatened by you or a social cost to your professional success? You may worry that’s a pattern that will repeat.
Do you have some imposter syndrome around the job? You may feel deep down you aren’t worthy of the salary.
These are just examples, but usually fear of it all going away is about something much deeper than just the dollar amount of your emergency fund or the stability of your industry. If you can identify the trigger it may give you some peace to see it as what it actually is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say just have fun now and don't worry so much about the future!
And then look around at age 50 and start to panic that you haven't built wealth
Right! There is a happy medium. In our 20s, we were happy to not be poor, like we both were growing up. So most things were an upgrade from our previous lives. We made great $$$, chose to actively pay off $80K in students loans (this was 30+ years ago, so a lot for 2 of us), and save for a home. Bought a home we could afford on one salary (our salaries were similar), and saved the rest for retirement and building a 12 month emergency fund. Sure we took "vacations" but other than our honeymoon, it was "drive somewhere within 4-5 hours and spend 5-6 days", it wasn't fly and stay in luxury places. Drove our first cars for 8-10 years, and that allowed us to pay cash at age 32 for a "brand new luxury vehicle", and we never financed a car after that. Because we keep them for at least 7-8 years as well.
If you save intensively in your 20s/early 30s, the rest of your life will be so much easier. Don't regret that for a minute.
Now we can do what we want, when we want basically
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say just have fun now and don't worry so much about the future!
And then look around at age 50 and start to panic that you haven't built wealth
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say just have fun now and don't worry so much about the future!
And then look around at age 50 and start to panic that you haven't built wealth
Anonymous wrote:I recently broke into a seven figure income (think junior c-suite at a mid-sized tech company). As a former public servant, this is both unexpected and unfamiliar. It wasn't until a few years ago that I realized this was even a possibility let alone a likelihood. I feel exceptionally fortunate.
But this situation is new enough that I haven't yet built up an equivalent nest egg, so the income/wealth doesn't feel permanent. The "problem" is that I now find myself perpetually concerned about the ethereal nature of the situation. I like my job and am unlikely to lose it, but stranger things have happened - an issue I'm blamed for, an acquisition by a larger company that make my role duplicative, etc. And while I think I could probably land an equivalent role, I find my thoughts frequently drifting toward what-if scenarios regarding a loss of my income.
For those who have been in high-paying jobs for a while, does this eventually go away? Is this just the new situation jitters, or will this now preoccupy my spare thought cycles? I don't want to be a person who thinks about money all the time, even if it's from a position of privilege.
And just to head off the inevitable... I don't post this with the intention to rub my good fortune in the faces of others. I'm not trolling. I recognize the cry-me-a-river aspect of this, but it's a legitimate situation and, for obvious reasons, I don't really have anybody to talk to in real life about it. So here I am.
Anonymous wrote:I would say just have fun now and don't worry so much about the future!
Anonymous wrote:Not being snarky - what is junior c suite? Also at a tech co (public but also worked at mid sized ones before too) and never heard this term. Google didn’t help either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recently broke into a seven figure income (think junior c-suite at a mid-sized tech company). As a former public servant, this is both unexpected and unfamiliar. It wasn't until a few years ago that I realized this was even a possibility let alone a likelihood. I feel exceptionally fortunate.
But this situation is new enough that I haven't yet built up an equivalent nest egg, so the income/wealth doesn't feel permanent. The "problem" is that I now find myself perpetually concerned about the ethereal nature of the situation. I like my job and am unlikely to lose it, but stranger things have happened - an issue I'm blamed for, an acquisition by a larger company that make my role duplicative, etc. And while I think I could probably land an equivalent role, I find my thoughts frequently drifting toward what-if scenarios regarding a loss of my income.
For those who have been in high-paying jobs for a while, does this eventually go away? Is this just the new situation jitters, or will this now preoccupy my spare thought cycles? I don't want to be a person who thinks about money all the time, even if it's from a position of privilege.
And just to head off the inevitable... I don't post this with the intention to rub my good fortune in the faces of others. I'm not trolling. I recognize the cry-me-a-river aspect of this, but it's a legitimate situation and, for obvious reasons, I don't really have anybody to talk to in real life about it. So here I am.
Don't change your lifestyle. Love below your means. I am very high income and my lifestyle has remained the same. I still take free flights using credit card points. I don't go to 5 star Michelin restaurants. I don't drink alcohol. I do a lot of free things such as hiking kayaking. I do road trips and stay at cheap hotels. I never worry about how much things cost or how much I have in savings because I am constantly doing things under budget.
Now if you feel as an "executive" you need to live in a mansion and drive an s-600 Benz then yeah you should freak out cause that lifestyle isn't cheap.
There’s some space in between what you’re describing and living in a mansion.
You only live once and can’t take it with you. I throughly enjoy my luxury hotel stays, dining out and not hassling with hotel points and airline miles.