Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My net worth is at least 5x yours and I wouldn’t.
So you have $10 million and won’t buy something for 5k? That’s like someone with 10k savings who won’t buy a $5 coffee. It’s not going to have any effect on your life
Not a logical (or fair) comparison. Having only $10K in savings does not mean you should routinely spend $5 on coffee. Sure one day wont matter. But it's when you have that attitude about many things, and soon you are spending $500 per month on "all the little things/$5 items that don't really matter" and then you realize that $500/month could be a $6K vacation or a $3K vacation and $3K towards your kid's college fund. It's all in your attitude and long term plan.
Most people take that approach and then wonder why they are living paycheck to paycheck and don't have enough savings for retirement.
Sure to be fair that’s not a perfect analogy since coffee is a regular thing. Income in this situation is more relevant. Back when I was a new grad I had about 10k in savings after a couple months working @ 80k/yr. I ate out almost every day for lunch and bought coffee too. $10-15/day. Had a car payment/student loans. Lived in a 1BR apartment in nova. Still saved nearly half my income.
9 years later, I earn 300k and have a $1.3M net worth starting from negative -30k at 22. Along the way I made a lot of stupid purchases. I bought a 90k sports car 5 years ago, spent about 75k on travel, another 80k on hobbies over the years, I eat out several times a week. Despite this my net worth keeps going up. It would have been higher if I lived very frugally but I like to enjoy life.
Being ridiculously frugal to the point where you can’t spend 5k on something that makes you happy when you have $10M is just dumb
Well when we finished grad school, we had a combined income of $85K and almost $70K in student loans. So we lived in a moderate apartment (nice, but not as nice as we would have liked), took lunch 4 out of 5 days (still ate in cafeteria with coworkers all days), brought coffee from home, and worked to pay off our student loans. Paid them off in 2 years, then saved for 20% down on a house (needed $40K). By age 26, had bought a house, then began paying off the cars and our 2nd and beyond cars for each of us were purchased with cash (each got a new luxury car at age 30-32). We still enjoyed life, we still socialized, but we did spend 3-4 years getting ourselves out of debt and on the right track.
Spouse moved up quickly in management at their company and moved around to improve opportunities. Paid off our house by 40 (this was house #3 due to moves) Was a CEO by 40, retired by mid 50s, with a UHNW. So we treated ourselves to things along the way, but yeah in our 20s, we didn't splurge, we focused on getting a strong financial foundation. In return, by 35 we were able to take almost any vacation we wanted, drive whatever cars we wanted, etc. But we didn't go overboard. Nothing like retiring in your early to mid 50s, with the ability to spend $500K+ per year for the rest of your life and still leave your kids a fortune.