Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband has a 25M and goes about in his clean but worn clothes from years ago. When he's forced to buy new ones because there are too many holes in his, he picks the cheapest ones. He's usually very budget conscious, except for his children's education.
Some people just don't give a fig about appearances or what "they should do" and just live their lives however the heck they want. Often they're on the spectrum, because being autistic typically depresses the importance of societal norms.
If he always picks the cheapest clothes, that’s a sign that he DOES, in fact, “give a fig” - he cares about the appearance of being wise with money.
It’s not necessarily a virtue.
Most people on this board think it is a virtue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband has a 25M and goes about in his clean but worn clothes from years ago. When he's forced to buy new ones because there are too many holes in his, he picks the cheapest ones. He's usually very budget conscious, except for his children's education.
Some people just don't give a fig about appearances or what "they should do" and just live their lives however the heck they want. Often they're on the spectrum, because being autistic typically depresses the importance of societal norms.
If he always picks the cheapest clothes, that’s a sign that he DOES, in fact, “give a fig” - he cares about the appearance of being wise with money.
It’s not necessarily a virtue.
Anonymous wrote:I’m talking about someone who is a lawyer and makes very good money, but:
* never tips or donates
* almost never eats out, and if she does it’s always the cheapest place or the cheapest thing on the menu
* avoids things like concerts, sporting events, festivals, shows, spas, etc. because she it’s as a waste of money
* doesn’t spend money on entertainment, events, gifts, Ubers, clothes, etc.
* hates paying for convenience (delivery fees, checked bags, valet, subscriptions, etc.)
* travels a few times a year but always very cheaply (budget airlines/basic hotels/red-eyes/points deals)
* researches everything and buys the cheapest/highest-quality version of literally everything from toothpaste to furniture
* can’t fathom spending $200 on a dress or $2000 on coat
Would men see this as financially responsible and disciplined, or as overly cheap/miserly? Especially in dating, does this kind of mindset help or hurt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m talking about someone who is a lawyer and makes very good money, but:
* never tips or donates
* almost never eats out, and if she does it’s always the cheapest place or the cheapest thing on the menu
* avoids things like concerts, sporting events, festivals, shows, spas, etc. because she it’s as a waste of money
* doesn’t spend money on entertainment, events, gifts, Ubers, clothes, etc.
* hates paying for convenience (delivery fees, checked bags, valet, subscriptions, etc.)
* travels a few times a year but always very cheaply (budget airlines/basic hotels/red-eyes/points deals)
* researches everything and buys the cheapest/highest-quality version of literally everything from toothpaste to furniture
* can’t fathom spending $200 on a dress or $2000 on coat
Would men see this as financially responsible and disciplined, or as overly cheap/miserly? Especially in dating, does this kind of mindset help or hurt?
I'm like this, except for the bolded. I think they are green flags, but since no one ever asks me on a date, maybe they are red.
The thing is you can't change who you are. My parents were like this, too. And my parents are not struggling in retirement unlike a couple of their friends who are supporting their middle-aged children because they did not pass down frugality as a value.
To the person who said it was the sign of a low-maintenance woman, I totally agree. I am low maintenance. But I'm beginning to see that most men really don't want a low-maintenance woman, regardless of what they say.
Anonymous wrote:My husband has a 25M and goes about in his clean but worn clothes from years ago. When he's forced to buy new ones because there are too many holes in his, he picks the cheapest ones. He's usually very budget conscious, except for his children's education.
Some people just don't give a fig about appearances or what "they should do" and just live their lives however the heck they want. Often they're on the spectrum, because being autistic typically depresses the importance of societal norms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m talking about someone who is a lawyer and makes very good money, but:
* never tips or donates
* almost never eats out, and if she does it’s always the cheapest place or the cheapest thing on the menu
* avoids things like concerts, sporting events, festivals, shows, spas, etc. because she it’s as a waste of money
* doesn’t spend money on entertainment, events, gifts, Ubers, clothes, etc.
* hates paying for convenience (delivery fees, checked bags, valet, subscriptions, etc.)
* travels a few times a year but always very cheaply (budget airlines/basic hotels/red-eyes/points deals)
* researches everything and buys the cheapest/highest-quality version of literally everything from toothpaste to furniture
* can’t fathom spending $200 on a dress or $2000 on coat
Would men see this as financially responsible and disciplined, or as overly cheap/miserly? Especially in dating, does this kind of mindset help or hurt?
This person sucks and would suck to be around
+1. Being around people with these money hangups is the worst. Let me be clear, I am not talking about poor people who need to economize to feed their kids or suggesting people skip funding their 401K to buy a Birkin, but people who nakr money but are cheap and constantly fixate on it are such bores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m talking about someone who is a lawyer and makes very good money, but:
* never tips or donates
* almost never eats out, and if she does it’s always the cheapest place or the cheapest thing on the menu
* avoids things like concerts, sporting events, festivals, shows, spas, etc. because she it’s as a waste of money
* doesn’t spend money on entertainment, events, gifts, Ubers, clothes, etc.
* hates paying for convenience (delivery fees, checked bags, valet, subscriptions, etc.)
* travels a few times a year but always very cheaply (budget airlines/basic hotels/red-eyes/points deals)
* researches everything and buys the cheapest/highest-quality version of literally everything from toothpaste to furniture
* can’t fathom spending $200 on a dress or $2000 on coat
Would men see this as financially responsible and disciplined, or as overly cheap/miserly? Especially in dating, does this kind of mindset help or hurt?
I'm like this, except for the bolded. I think they are green flags, but since no one ever asks me on a date, maybe they are red.
The thing is you can't change who you are. My parents were like this, too. And my parents are not struggling in retirement unlike a couple of their friends who are supporting their middle-aged children because they did not pass down frugality as a value.
To the person who said it was the sign of a low-maintenance woman, I totally agree. I am low maintenance. But I'm beginning to see that most men really don't want a low-maintenance woman, regardless of what they say.
Anonymous wrote:Not tipping where it is expected is just cheap and poor manners. The rest wouldn’t bother me as much, but if your financial values don’t align then don’t date this person.
Anonymous wrote:There are plenty of free concerts. This person sound like a homebody.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m talking about someone who is a lawyer and makes very good money, but:
* never tips or donates
* almost never eats out, and if she does it’s always the cheapest place or the cheapest thing on the menu
* avoids things like concerts, sporting events, festivals, shows, spas, etc. because she it’s as a waste of money
* doesn’t spend money on entertainment, events, gifts, Ubers, clothes, etc.
* hates paying for convenience (delivery fees, checked bags, valet, subscriptions, etc.)
* travels a few times a year but always very cheaply (budget airlines/basic hotels/red-eyes/points deals)
* researches everything and buys the cheapest/highest-quality version of literally everything from toothpaste to furniture
* can’t fathom spending $200 on a dress or $2000 on coat
Would men see this as financially responsible and disciplined, or as overly cheap/miserly? Especially in dating, does this kind of mindset help or hurt?
This person sucks and would suck to be around