Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just today I was in a shop and a beautiful blouse was $550. We have a very high net worth but I just don’t have the desire to spend money like that. But the two of us went out to dinner tonight and it was $200. I drive a Subaru SUV, but we fly first class. I’m sure a shrink could define my behavior.
This is so weird to me. I’d buy a $500 blouse, but not fly first class. Never seemed worth it to me for a few hours where I’m fine in economy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our income is around $2.5M-$3M on a net worth of about $38-40M. I am recently retired, albeit very young. We earned all of our money and I earned the vast majority of it.
Anything that costs less than $100 will never matter ever. It doesn’t matter how many of anything we buy at that amount or how often.
Between $100-$1k I mentally acknowledge the expenditure. But I notice that in all sorts of circumstances something is pricier than it should be but it doesn’t stop me buying it and rarely would have me spend the time looking for a cheaper alternative as my time is worth more than this amount.
$1K- 10K is an amount I would spend without planning. At this amount it is objectively real money, but subjectively still doesn’t matter. I would, spend this much on a car repair, book a spontaneous vacation, buy a piece of art or make a donation commitment without feeling the need to check with DH or that it would matter. I would notice it on my credit card bill though and confirm that it is legit.
Above $10K is real money to me.
That said, the irony of money is that if you have a lot, there isn’t much you actually want. We spend on vacations, our house (although that is nearly done) and experiences. We hardly if ever buy stuff (like jewelry, hand bags, designer clothing). We do buy a car every 5-10 years, but nothing particularly fancy. We just aren’t car people. And while I’d like to be we aren’t really art people either. There are surprising few tangible things that we actually want.
HORSES you need horses. They’re the most fun and you can spend all of your money. Enjoy!
Anonymous wrote:Our income is around $2.5M-$3M on a net worth of about $38-40M. I am recently retired, albeit very young. We earned all of our money and I earned the vast majority of it.
Anything that costs less than $100 will never matter ever. It doesn’t matter how many of anything we buy at that amount or how often.
Between $100-$1k I mentally acknowledge the expenditure. But I notice that in all sorts of circumstances something is pricier than it should be but it doesn’t stop me buying it and rarely would have me spend the time looking for a cheaper alternative as my time is worth more than this amount.
$1K- 10K is an amount I would spend without planning. At this amount it is objectively real money, but subjectively still doesn’t matter. I would, spend this much on a car repair, book a spontaneous vacation, buy a piece of art or make a donation commitment without feeling the need to check with DH or that it would matter. I would notice it on my credit card bill though and confirm that it is legit.
Above $10K is real money to me.
That said, the irony of money is that if you have a lot, there isn’t much you actually want. We spend on vacations, our house (although that is nearly done) and experiences. We hardly if ever buy stuff (like jewelry, hand bags, designer clothing). We do buy a car every 5-10 years, but nothing particularly fancy. We just aren’t car people. And while I’d like to be we aren’t really art people either. There are surprising few tangible things that we actually want.
Anonymous wrote:Our income is around $2.5M-$3M on a net worth of about $38-40M. I am recently retired, albeit very young. We earned all of our money and I earned the vast majority of it.
Anything that costs less than $100 will never matter ever. It doesn’t matter how many of anything we buy at that amount or how often.
Between $100-$1k I mentally acknowledge the expenditure. But I notice that in all sorts of circumstances something is pricier than it should be but it doesn’t stop me buying it and rarely would have me spend the time looking for a cheaper alternative as my time is worth more than this amount.
$1K- 10K is an amount I would spend without planning. At this amount it is objectively real money, but subjectively still doesn’t matter. I would, spend this much on a car repair, book a spontaneous vacation, buy a piece of art or make a donation commitment without feeling the need to check with DH or that it would matter. I would notice it on my credit card bill though and confirm that it is legit.
Above $10K is real money to me.
That said, the irony of money is that if you have a lot, there isn’t much you actually want. We spend on vacations, our house (although that is nearly done) and experiences. We hardly if ever buy stuff (like jewelry, hand bags, designer clothing). We do buy a car every 5-10 years, but nothing particularly fancy. We just aren’t car people. And while I’d like to be we aren’t really art people either. There are surprising few tangible things that we actually want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious about how much folks spend on things like jewelry, designer clothing, bags, cars and the like. If you want throw in travel, too. Curious in relation to your own personal income as well as HHI.
Realize everyone’s priorities are different, but I’m very curious about how much folks who, say, spend $10K on a piece of non-engagement jewelry are making.
Personally I make $280K, with a HHI around $400 and I still feel anxious about a $1K purchase let alone more than that!
Well, things like jewelry, designer clothing, bags, cars and the like are utter waste of money to impress others so your anxiety is absolutely justified.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious about how much folks spend on things like jewelry, designer clothing, bags, cars and the like. If you want throw in travel, too. Curious in relation to your own personal income as well as HHI.
Realize everyone’s priorities are different, but I’m very curious about how much folks who, say, spend $10K on a piece of non-engagement jewelry are making.
Personally I make $280K, with a HHI around $400 and I still feel anxious about a $1K purchase let alone more than that!
Well, things like jewelry, designer clothing, bags, cars and the like are utter waste of money to impress others so your anxiety is absolutely justified.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our income ranges from $350-$550k. We don’t make any luxury purchases. None. We can’t afford it. Our normal expenses are too high, and college about to hit, plus retirement. I don’t even have a house cleaner.
500K and your regular expenses are too high? What pray tell are you spending on?