Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are comfortably off...upper middle class (the "poors" around here in some circles) with typical DC-type jobs- think lawyers, think tank, middle career researchers. One of my favorite things about dcum is learning about the stuff rich people do/can afford/consider typical. This is a totally non-judgmental thread. It is intended to be enlightning. Can you share some of your discoveries? I.e. you click on a thread and it leaves you thinking, "huh. I had no idea that was a thing. Cool window into a totally different world!" Most recently for me: the baby nurse thread!
I'm confused. What are "think lawyers"? Do they work in a "think tank"?
lol- sorry. crappy grammar due to being on my phone. meant:
think - lawyers, think tank wonks, mid-career researchers. In other words, under a quarter million a year HHI but a fair bit into the 6 figures. You know, "poor" around these parts in terms of the responses I am looking for but quite wealthy in reality.
Anonymous wrote:I think that nanny gig would be awful. Surrounded by a luxury lifestyle that you couldn't hope to afford from your own earning power. Depressing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are comfortably off...upper middle class (the "poors" around here in some circles) with typical DC-type jobs- think lawyers, think tank, middle career researchers. One of my favorite things about dcum is learning about the stuff rich people do/can afford/consider typical. This is a totally non-judgmental thread. It is intended to be enlightning. Can you share some of your discoveries? I.e. you click on a thread and it leaves you thinking, "huh. I had no idea that was a thing. Cool window into a totally different world!" Most recently for me: the baby nurse thread!
I'm confused. What are "think lawyers"? Do they work in a "think tank"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are comfortably off...upper middle class (the "poors" around here in some circles) with typical DC-type jobs- think lawyers, think tank, middle career researchers. One of my favorite things about dcum is learning about the stuff rich people do/can afford/consider typical. This is a totally non-judgmental thread. It is intended to be enlightning. Can you share some of your discoveries? I.e. you click on a thread and it leaves you thinking, "huh. I had no idea that was a thing. Cool window into a totally different world!" Most recently for me: the baby nurse thread!
I'm confused. What are "think lawyers"? Do they work in a "think tank"?
Anonymous wrote:We are comfortably off...upper middle class (the "poors" around here in some circles) with typical DC-type jobs- think lawyers, think tank, middle career researchers. One of my favorite things about dcum is learning about the stuff rich people do/can afford/consider typical. This is a totally non-judgmental thread. It is intended to be enlightning. Can you share some of your discoveries? I.e. you click on a thread and it leaves you thinking, "huh. I had no idea that was a thing. Cool window into a totally different world!" Most recently for me: the baby nurse thread!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here-
Yes! On the two month vacay...my first thought is how do we accumulate that kind of time off and then we would have to save for years and...oh, right, if you have to think about it like this, not your world.
Well,as you said, you are poor. And jealous seeming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've learned that there are no schools but private schools, that rich men need their wives to stay hot or they'll be summarily dismissed, that "Mrs. Simpson's" is a thing, and that 1000 square foot per family member is "just right" in a home. And I've learned that nobody cleans their own house.
Mrs. Simpson's?
You obviously aren't rich.
Anonymous wrote:Free time, location flexibility & low stress are the best things about having enough money that you don't have to worry about it. We bought a second home overseas & have turned it into our primary home. Neither of us work, and we mostly spend our time as we please: exercising, exploring our new place, finding local artists to commission work for our new home & learning the language. Not much stress or pressure; it feels like an extended vacation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We take the nanny on vacations with us. I haven't been in a supermarket in months - someone else does our food shopping for us. They also do the basic errands - post office, dry cleaners, places like that.
Post office?
Anonymous wrote:Op here-
Yes! On the two month vacay...my first thought is how do we accumulate that kind of time off and then we would have to save for years and...oh, right, if you have to think about it like this, not your world.
Anonymous wrote:A whole family, two month vacay in Europe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've learned that there are no schools but private schools, that rich men need their wives to stay hot or they'll be summarily dismissed, that "Mrs. Simpson's" is a thing, and that 1000 square foot per family member is "just right" in a home. And I've learned that nobody cleans their own house.
Mrs. Simpson's?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious- what HHI do you consider rich? We have a HHI around 450k. I don't know if that is considered rich or not, but one of the luxuries I've enjoyed is having a nanny come 3 days a week while I'm on maternity leave. I go see my trainer, get my nails done, go spinning etc. she comes for 4 hours T-R. It feels like a major luxury to me, but we did that instead of a night nurse that cost way more because DD was decent at night and since I am EBF it didn't even give me any more rest (we tried it for a few nights).
$450k = rich