Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Live on half your salary for a few years. And if that means living an extremely frugal life, so be it.
We did that when we were a young couple. We lived in a one room apartment in a safe but cheap area. Rarely ate out, had only one second-hand car, DH carpooled, we did not buy clothes etc unless necessary and lived on 30K, while having 42K HHI. Basically, we lived like how majority of college students live. Our furniture was second hand and most of our stuff was from salvation army.
When we reached a HHI of 75K (within 5 years of marriage), we saved 35K in one year and that was our down payment to our SFH worth 350K.
We have not looked back after that. We now have a HHI of 300K, and we still live on 120K a year. Our cost structure is very low because our mortgage is very low. We are the millionaire's next door. Our retirement, insurance, and college funds are top notch. My kids have got full ride on merit scholarships to college, and we have instilled in them the lesson to live below their means.
Why are you in this thread? No one asked for advice, or your life story, we're just commiserating with others who are in the same financial situation.
God, people can be so obtuse sometime. Blah blah Money Mustache blah blah Millionaire Next Door. Get a new script.
Instead of being rude and ugly maybe you should reread the post and see if there is anything you can learn? Maybe the post is annoying but you have to give the pp credit for what his or her family has accomplished. Have you saved that much?
There are literally DOZENS of threads where posters are offering sage financial advice.
No one asked for the pontificating from someone who is NOT living paycheck to paycheck. God!
And no Einstein, obviously no one living freaking paycheck to paycheck is worth a million dollars. Hence the point of the goddamn thread.
Anonymous wrote:Live on half your salary for a few years. And if that means living an extremely frugal life, so be it.
We did that when we were a young couple. We lived in a one room apartment in a safe but cheap area. Rarely ate out, had only one second-hand car, DH carpooled, we did not buy clothes etc unless necessary and lived on 30K, while having 42K HHI. Basically, we lived like how majority of college students live. Our furniture was second hand and most of our stuff was from salvation army.
When we reached a HHI of 75K (within 5 years of marriage), we saved 35K in one year and that was our down payment to our SFH worth 350K.
We have not looked back after that. We now have a HHI of 300K, and we still live on 120K a year. Our cost structure is very low because our mortgage is very low. We are the millionaire's next door. Our retirement, insurance, and college funds are top notch. My kids have got full ride on merit scholarships to college, and we have instilled in them the lesson to live below their means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Live on half your salary for a few years. And if that means living an extremely frugal life, so be it.
We did that when we were a young couple. We lived in a one room apartment in a safe but cheap area. Rarely ate out, had only one second-hand car, DH carpooled, we did not buy clothes etc unless necessary and lived on 30K, while having 42K HHI. Basically, we lived like how majority of college students live. Our furniture was second hand and most of our stuff was from salvation army.
When we reached a HHI of 75K (within 5 years of marriage), we saved 35K in one year and that was our down payment to our SFH worth 350K.
We have not looked back after that. We now have a HHI of 300K, and we still live on 120K a year. Our cost structure is very low because our mortgage is very low. We are the millionaire's next door. Our retirement, insurance, and college funds are top notch. My kids have got full ride on merit scholarships to college, and we have instilled in them the lesson to live below their means.
Why are you in this thread? No one asked for advice, or your life story, we're just commiserating with others who are in the same financial situation.
God, people can be so obtuse sometime. Blah blah Money Mustache blah blah Millionaire Next Door. Get a new script.
Instead of being rude and ugly maybe you should reread the post and see if there is anything you can learn? Maybe the post is annoying but you have to give the pp credit for what his or her family has accomplished. Have you saved that much?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Live on half your salary for a few years. And if that means living an extremely frugal life, so be it.
We did that when we were a young couple. We lived in a one room apartment in a safe but cheap area. Rarely ate out, had only one second-hand car, DH carpooled, we did not buy clothes etc unless necessary and lived on 30K, while having 42K HHI. Basically, we lived like how majority of college students live. Our furniture was second hand and most of our stuff was from salvation army.
When we reached a HHI of 75K (within 5 years of marriage), we saved 35K in one year and that was our down payment to our SFH worth 350K.
We have not looked back after that. We now have a HHI of 300K, and we still live on 120K a year. Our cost structure is very low because our mortgage is very low. We are the millionaire's next door. Our retirement, insurance, and college funds are top notch. My kids have got full ride on merit scholarships to college, and we have instilled in them the lesson to live below their means.
Why are you in this thread? No one asked for advice, or your life story, we're just commiserating with others who are in the same financial situation.
God, people can be so obtuse sometime. Blah blah Money Mustache blah blah Millionaire Next Door. Get a new script.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do, but that is after savings comes out. I make sub 6 figures and have a child.
If you are saving, then you are NOT living pay check to pay check.
Anonymous wrote:Live on half your salary for a few years. And if that means living an extremely frugal life, so be it.
We did that when we were a young couple. We lived in a one room apartment in a safe but cheap area. Rarely ate out, had only one second-hand car, DH carpooled, we did not buy clothes etc unless necessary and lived on 30K, while having 42K HHI. Basically, we lived like how majority of college students live. Our furniture was second hand and most of our stuff was from salvation army.
When we reached a HHI of 75K (within 5 years of marriage), we saved 35K in one year and that was our down payment to our SFH worth 350K.
We have not looked back after that. We now have a HHI of 300K, and we still live on 120K a year. Our cost structure is very low because our mortgage is very low. We are the millionaire's next door. Our retirement, insurance, and college funds are top notch. My kids have got full ride on merit scholarships to college, and we have instilled in them the lesson to live below their means.
Anonymous wrote:Live on half your salary for a few years. And if that means living an extremely frugal life, so be it.
We did that when we were a young couple. We lived in a one room apartment in a safe but cheap area. Rarely ate out, had only one second-hand car, DH carpooled, we did not buy clothes etc unless necessary and lived on 30K, while having 42K HHI. Basically, we lived like how majority of college students live. Our furniture was second hand and most of our stuff was from salvation army.
When we reached a HHI of 75K (within 5 years of marriage), we saved 35K in one year and that was our down payment to our SFH worth 350K.
We have not looked back after that. We now have a HHI of 300K, and we still live on 120K a year. Our cost structure is very low because our mortgage is very low. We are the millionaire's next door. Our retirement, insurance, and college funds are top notch. My kids have got full ride on merit scholarships to college, and we have instilled in them the lesson to live below their means.
Anonymous wrote:Live on half your salary for a few years. And if that means living an extremely frugal life, so be it.
We did that when we were a young couple. We lived in a one room apartment in a safe but cheap area. Rarely ate out, had only one second-hand car, DH carpooled, we did not buy clothes etc unless necessary and lived on 30K, while having 42K HHI. Basically, we lived like how majority of college students live. Our furniture was second hand and most of our stuff was from salvation army.
When we reached a HHI of 75K (within 5 years of marriage), we saved 35K in one year and that was our down payment to our SFH worth 350K.
We have not looked back after that. We now have a HHI of 300K, and we still live on 120K a year. Our cost structure is very low because our mortgage is very low. We are the millionaire's next door. Our retirement, insurance, and college funds are top notch. My kids have got full ride on merit scholarships to college, and we have instilled in them the lesson to live below their means.
Anonymous wrote:Yup. HHI 95k, two kids (one with SN) and me with Multiple Sclerosis. Our medical bills eat up everything we have.