Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You are all nuts our HHI is $110 in close in bethesda in a nice house and live perfectly fine on that.
I don't think I'm nuts. The term "comfortable" is a relative term.
For our family $200k provides a comfortable living where we can pay for someone to clean the house, do the grunt work in the yard, save for ourselves and the children and not really think about ordering in, getting a message a couple of times a year or flying to visit family for a three day weekend a few times a year.
Just because your comfort zone is $100k doesn't make other people nuts, it means you have different priorities on how you choose to spend you time and save/spend your money. Don't be so judgmental.
That's all you do with 200k?
You're joking, right? We do what we want to do, have enough for savings, and not worry about the bills. That, to us, is living comfortably.
We do all that plus travel internationally, two kids (no childcare payments) for less than $100k. We live very comfortably!
Anonymous wrote:I can live on $200k. I'd love 300k because I have a mental goal of saving $100,000 a year and 300,000 would enable that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You are all nuts our HHI is $110 in close in bethesda in a nice house and live perfectly fine on that.
I don't think I'm nuts. The term "comfortable" is a relative term.
For our family $200k provides a comfortable living where we can pay for someone to clean the house, do the grunt work in the yard, save for ourselves and the children and not really think about ordering in, getting a message a couple of times a year or flying to visit family for a three day weekend a few times a year.
Just because your comfort zone is $100k doesn't make other people nuts, it means you have different priorities on how you choose to spend you time and save/spend your money. Don't be so judgmental.
That's all you do with 200k?
You're joking, right? We do what we want to do, have enough for savings, and not worry about the bills. That, to us, is living comfortably.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I make under $60K as a single parent with one school-aged kid. It's tight, but we don't really lack for anything. I wouldn't call it comfortable, but I'm not poor. I'm able to take 2-3 trips a year to visit family and my kid is in 2 extracurriculars through the parks and rec league. I don't have any debt other than about $20K in student loans, I contibute to retirement and I rent.
For ME, I'd feel comfortable at about $70K. I could max out retirement and start contributing to college savings and saving to buy a house.
And, for me, that is what I remember from my first day of economics class at college:
What do we want? A little bit more. Sure, a pile of money would be great but really I'd be OK with just a bit more than what I have. This drives our entire economic system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You are all nuts our HHI is $110 in close in bethesda in a nice house and live perfectly fine on that.
When did you buy your house?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You are all nuts our HHI is $110 in close in bethesda in a nice house and live perfectly fine on that.
When did you buy your house?
Anonymous wrote:
You are all nuts our HHI is $110 in close in bethesda in a nice house and live perfectly fine on that.
Anonymous wrote:I make under $60K as a single parent with one school-aged kid. It's tight, but we don't really lack for anything. I wouldn't call it comfortable, but I'm not poor. I'm able to take 2-3 trips a year to visit family and my kid is in 2 extracurriculars through the parks and rec league. I don't have any debt other than about $20K in student loans, I contibute to retirement and I rent.
For ME, I'd feel comfortable at about $70K. I could max out retirement and start contributing to college savings and saving to buy a house.