Anonymous wrote:Can you and DH find remote jobs or jobs that are mostly remote and move somewhere with a lower cost of living so your money will go farther? Also psychologists did a study and comparative wealth apparently makes people very unhappy, and it’s prevalent on the East Coast. Lots of people with lots of money and a “keeping up with the Jones’”mentality. This is common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, but the Biglaw lady where she and her husband now have to live on only 350k makes me want to puke. That's not going from UMC to MC -- it's going from RICH to UMC. Also, she can do what she's doing now secure in the knowledge that she always has daddy to fall back on. She's the definition of privilege, and it's that privilege that has allowed her to make the choices that she did.
She's also the definition of clueless and out of touch.
Agreed, I was feeling bad for OP, but when I read that she suffers because her kids can't have horses or ridiculous vacations as opposed to just great vacations I can't roll my eyes hard enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My childhood best friend was like this. She grew up UMC - private schools, shopping sprees, any type of lesson imaginable, had the nicest apt in college, parents paid for everything. Then the parents got divorced, dad went bankrupt and eventually died.
She has never been a high earner or even a medium earner. I will guess her jobs paid 30-50k. She has struggled with spending and credit card bills her entire adult life. She ended up marrying a finance guy who did very well but was not like a hedge fund level guy. I know they had a lot of disagreements about money and eventually divorced. Her credit is really bad because she literally didn’t pay her high credit card bills from her 20s, let them go to collections, moved and changed phone numbers. She has excellent expensive taste, very polished and just likes to have the best of everything. She cannot budget.
I, on the other hand, grew up poor. She was my rich friend. I had nothing as a kid and worked hard in school. I married a high earner. He wasn’t high earning when we met and got married. I would have beeen fine if Dh earned 200k or $2m. Dh earns $2+m per year. I don’t really buy much and we save a lot.
I remind my children how their parents had nothing and how they have to work hard. I try not to spoil them with material items. We do experience a lot and vacation often.
Lol, DCUM women are morons. "I'm a good person. I would not divorce my husband if he only made $200K per year."![]()
I thought the same thing. “I don’t care if my husband is high income or super high income.” Makes me question the statement “I grew up poor.” Poor like your parents bought you a Mustang instead of a Mercedes when you turned 16?
I was a free lunch kid so actually really poor. I earned 200k out of grad school so it is reasonable for me to have a spouse who was my equal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, but the Biglaw lady where she and her husband now have to live on only 350k makes me want to puke. That's not going from UMC to MC -- it's going from RICH to UMC. Also, she can do what she's doing now secure in the knowledge that she always has daddy to fall back on. She's the definition of privilege, and it's that privilege that has allowed her to make the choices that she did.
She's also the definition of clueless and out of touch.
Amen. These dc people are truly the worst
PP "Biglaw lady" here. Ok ok, sorry. I was just saying I relate to the feeling of knowing I won't be as financially successful as my parents were. I understand that I am extremely privileged!
You don't get it, and you never will.
It sounds like you don’t get it, and you don’t even want to try.
Anonymous wrote:Can you and DH find remote jobs or jobs that are mostly remote and move somewhere with a lower cost of living so your money will go farther? Also psychologists did a study and comparative wealth apparently makes people very unhappy, and it’s prevalent on the East Coast. Lots of people with lots of money and a “keeping up with the Jones’”mentality. This is common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My childhood best friend was like this. She grew up UMC - private schools, shopping sprees, any type of lesson imaginable, had the nicest apt in college, parents paid for everything. Then the parents got divorced, dad went bankrupt and eventually died.
She has never been a high earner or even a medium earner. I will guess her jobs paid 30-50k. She has struggled with spending and credit card bills her entire adult life. She ended up marrying a finance guy who did very well but was not like a hedge fund level guy. I know they had a lot of disagreements about money and eventually divorced. Her credit is really bad because she literally didn’t pay her high credit card bills from her 20s, let them go to collections, moved and changed phone numbers. She has excellent expensive taste, very polished and just likes to have the best of everything. She cannot budget.
I, on the other hand, grew up poor. She was my rich friend. I had nothing as a kid and worked hard in school. I married a high earner. He wasn’t high earning when we met and got married. I would have beeen fine if Dh earned 200k or $2m. Dh earns $2+m per year. I don’t really buy much and we save a lot.
I remind my children how their parents had nothing and how they have to work hard. I try not to spoil them with material items. We do experience a lot and vacation often.
Lol, DCUM women are morons. "I'm a good person. I would not divorce my husband if he only made $200K per year."![]()
I thought the same thing. “I don’t care if my husband is high income or super high income.” Makes me question the statement “I grew up poor.” Poor like your parents bought you a Mustang instead of a Mercedes when you turned 16?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My childhood best friend was like this. She grew up UMC - private schools, shopping sprees, any type of lesson imaginable, had the nicest apt in college, parents paid for everything. Then the parents got divorced, dad went bankrupt and eventually died.
She has never been a high earner or even a medium earner. I will guess her jobs paid 30-50k. She has struggled with spending and credit card bills her entire adult life. She ended up marrying a finance guy who did very well but was not like a hedge fund level guy. I know they had a lot of disagreements about money and eventually divorced. Her credit is really bad because she literally didn’t pay her high credit card bills from her 20s, let them go to collections, moved and changed phone numbers. She has excellent expensive taste, very polished and just likes to have the best of everything. She cannot budget.
I, on the other hand, grew up poor. She was my rich friend. I had nothing as a kid and worked hard in school. I married a high earner. He wasn’t high earning when we met and got married. I would have beeen fine if Dh earned 200k or $2m. Dh earns $2+m per year. I don’t really buy much and we save a lot.
I remind my children how their parents had nothing and how they have to work hard. I try not to spoil them with material items. We do experience a lot and vacation often.
Lol, DCUM women are morons. "I'm a good person. I would not divorce my husband if he only made $200K per year."![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can relate OP. I grew up comfortably MC in a rural area (i.e. no pricey hobbies, cars, or trips to Europe, but we had a 2 story Cape Cod in a neighborhood of smaller ranches and I always knew I'd go to college). Now just living in the DC area on an income comparable to my parents' at my age, my standard of living feels much lower, mainly due to the cost of housing and decline of pensions so I have to save a ton more. Sometimes I am ashamed of my tiny, shabby house. Honestly I am not sure how to deal but I try to do little things to make my house nicer, be grateful that I don't have to think twice about signing up my kid for activities, and remind myself that I won't regret saving a ton.
Lol, here's another one that should just shut up. Probably has a couple million in savings, "[doesn't] think twice about" certain discretionary expenses, but is mournful that she can't also have an Instagrammable house on top of that.
Anonymous wrote:My childhood best friend was like this. She grew up UMC - private schools, shopping sprees, any type of lesson imaginable, had the nicest apt in college, parents paid for everything. Then the parents got divorced, dad went bankrupt and eventually died.
She has never been a high earner or even a medium earner. I will guess her jobs paid 30-50k. She has struggled with spending and credit card bills her entire adult life. She ended up marrying a finance guy who did very well but was not like a hedge fund level guy. I know they had a lot of disagreements about money and eventually divorced. Her credit is really bad because she literally didn’t pay her high credit card bills from her 20s, let them go to collections, moved and changed phone numbers. She has excellent expensive taste, very polished and just likes to have the best of everything. She cannot budget.
I, on the other hand, grew up poor. She was my rich friend. I had nothing as a kid and worked hard in school. I married a high earner. He wasn’t high earning when we met and got married. I would have beeen fine if Dh earned 200k or $2m. Dh earns $2+m per year. I don’t really buy much and we save a lot.
I remind my children how their parents had nothing and how they have to work hard. I try not to spoil them with material items. We do experience a lot and vacation often.
Anonymous wrote:I can relate OP. I grew up comfortably MC in a rural area (i.e. no pricey hobbies, cars, or trips to Europe, but we had a 2 story Cape Cod in a neighborhood of smaller ranches and I always knew I'd go to college). Now just living in the DC area on an income comparable to my parents' at my age, my standard of living feels much lower, mainly due to the cost of housing and decline of pensions so I have to save a ton more. Sometimes I am ashamed of my tiny, shabby house. Honestly I am not sure how to deal but I try to do little things to make my house nicer, be grateful that I don't have to think twice about signing up my kid for activities, and remind myself that I won't regret saving a ton.