Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:300 in DC is not much
Not this again. Yes, it is. By every measure it is.
It’s a ton of money. If you can’t figure life out in that budget you definitely have lost the plot.
It just isn’t.
$300K a year is alot of money even in DC. If you can't see that, you are seriously living in a bubble.
If you are living in one room, don’t have kids, or school debts, medical issues or any other expenses it’s a lot. With kids and those other it’s UMC in DC if that.
$300k is UMC, not poor in DC. $600k house in good neighborhood in MoCo - paid off. Student loans paid off. Savings and retirement going. About to put 2nd of 3 kids into college (full pay, unfortunately - UMD encouraged.) If you can't make $300k work, you are trying to pretend you are richer than you are, or have seriously no money sense.
Your kids are in college which means you bought back when “good homes in good neighborhoods” in moco cost $600K. Moco is also NOT in DC which is more expensive. Sure it’s plenty of money if you already paid everything off. Duh.
Anonymous wrote:honestly even $500K isn't a lot in DC if your kids are in privates
Anonymous wrote:I grew up what I'd consider lower middle class, as in, there was never a question of "what do you want for dinner tonight?" It was always leftovers or whatever was on sale that day at the supermarket. We were never hungry, though, so I wouldn't say I grew up poor.
DH and I bring in around $350K. We live in a 3 bedroom row house in Adams Morgan. I walk to work. We pay a nanny and have older kid in private half-day preschool. We travel to Canada and Europe at least once a year to see family and we take another vacation within driving distance. I shop at Nordstrom Rack and Trader Joe's and get all the "necessary ingredients" (bread, some produce, fish) at Whole Foods. We have pension funds and our house is almost paid off.
I feel very very rich on $350K. SURE, we're not raking in millions but we have options, we are safe, and we do feel responsibility to support others, including by donating to charities and being active volunteers in our community.
Anyone living on annual income on this order of magnitude should feel very lucky indeed.
As for the article, it misses the point entirely but I have a 3 month old who wants milk so can't type why at the moment...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:300 in DC is not much
Not this again. Yes, it is. By every measure it is.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Many PP’s are just deny they are the problem and do exactly what essayist is critiquing.
You are quite literally proving her point.
It’s aaaalmost funny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:300 in DC is not much
Not this again. Yes, it is. By every measure it is.
It’s a ton of money. If you can’t figure life out in that budget you definitely have lost the plot.
It just isn’t.
$300K a year is alot of money even in DC. If you can't see that, you are seriously living in a bubble.
If you are living in one room, don’t have kids, or school debts, medical issues or any other expenses it’s a lot. With kids and those other it’s UMC in DC if that.
$300k is UMC, not poor in DC. $600k house in good neighborhood in MoCo - paid off. Student loans paid off. Savings and retirement going. About to put 2nd of 3 kids into college (full pay, unfortunately - UMD encouraged.) If you can't make $300k work, you are trying to pretend you are richer than you are, or have seriously no money sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a bizarre essay. How do you get from West Coast rich kids bullying another rich kid to "When these kids grow up, they end up at conferences where everybody lifts their champagne glasses to speeches about how we all need to “tear down the Man!” How we need to usurp conventional power structures. "
+1 OP is nuts.
Anonymous wrote:$600k house in good neighborhood in MoCo - paid off. Student loans paid off. Savings and retirement going. About to put 2nd of 3 kids into college (full pay, unfortunately - UMD encouraged.) If you can't make $300k work, you are trying to pretend you are richer than you are, or have seriously no money sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:300 in DC is not much
Not this again. Yes, it is. By every measure it is.
It’s a ton of money. If you can’t figure life out in that budget you definitely have lost the plot.
It just isn’t.
You are wrong. It is a lot of money. Just because it doesn't buy you as much as you would like it to, it is still a lot of money. And you can buy quite a lot if you are willing to leave the most desirable locales. So, just because it doesn't buy you the house you want in the best part of town, does not mean it isn't a lot of money.
It buys you a small, dumpy house in a suburb that is close to the city so that you can actually spend time with your kids and spouse.
It buys you options but it doesn’t mean that you are rich.