Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We have no retirement savings, because we emptied a small 401(k) to pay for our younger daughter’s wedding.
WTF?
yeah its normal get over it rich ahole
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't think I know anyone personally who couldn't pay $400 or even 2k for an emergency like the writer. And DH and I come from middle class families with blue collar or middle class jobs. Maybe our younger, early 20s sisters couldn't cope with emergencies, but they're just starting out and graduating.
The recipe for success in America isn't that hard. Graduate, get married and don't have kids until you're married with dual incomes.
oh yea, it is that simple. just 1, 2,3. Shit never happens.
I believe the statistics, but I find it offensive that he is trying to use them to justify his situation. He made plenty of money to live on, and live well. Just not the live in the Hamptons, pay full freight to Stanford, host a big wedding kind of definition of "well." He is shocked to discover that a non-best-selling writer can't live like that? Hint: if your neighbors are billionaires and you're not, you might need to think about whether it's smart to try to keep up with them.
Well that article strangely made me feel better about my middle class existence and the conservative choices I've made on housing and choosing jobs. We don't have a ton - but we have way more than that guy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2016/05/my-secret-shame/476415/
What do you think? Is this you? Why or why not?
They should ask reparations from the Roman Empire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We have no retirement savings, because we emptied a small 401(k) to pay for our younger daughter’s wedding.
WTF?
yeah its normal get over it rich ahole
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't think I know anyone personally who couldn't pay $400 or even 2k for an emergency like the writer. And DH and I come from middle class families with blue collar or middle class jobs. Maybe our younger, early 20s sisters couldn't cope with emergencies, but they're just starting out and graduating.
The recipe for success in America isn't that hard. Graduate, get married and don't have kids until you're married with dual incomes.
oh yea, it is that simple. just 1, 2,3. Shit never happens.
Anonymous wrote:The author was brutally honest about the stupid things he did. Prime example of someone that's highly educated yet broke. All because he thought he should live the dream but in reality it's his nightmare.
Do I believe the statistics in the piece ? Yes I do. This is America in the real. Pockets of wealth here and there but not everywhere and the struggle is real.
I see people living beyond their means daily. Priorities screwed up. Gotta front that wealth.
If you don't take care of you, no one else will.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did he chose to live in Brooklyn and have to pay for private schools when he could have lived in Staten Island, Queens - or the suburbs of Nassau or Suffolk county. Same thing with paying for his kid's wedding. Its keeping up with the Joneses. DH's family and my parents were poor and through our own savings we paid for a beautiful "UMC" wedding. Whatever that meant. Weddings are optional.
The first daughter went to medical school. Stanford is an extraordinarily good school but here's a dirty little secret, medical school is a different beast. You don't have to go to ivy to be a successful doctor. They care what more about your MCATs and which medical school/residency you get into. I know very successful doctors in high paying specialties that went to state schools. If you go to Stanford to do a start up that's a total different story.
They paid an inordinate amount of money for the second daughter to be a social worker. Poor choice.
Except like much of the article, bringing up the cost of college was misleading - he says his parents paid for most of their kids' education.
The article is not really an example of how the middle class is struggling - it's an example of how someone who's a spendthrift eventually runs out of money. Well, duh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We have no retirement savings, because we emptied a small 401(k) to pay for our younger daughter’s wedding.
WTF?
yeah its normal get over it rich ahole
I would die of shame if I let my middle class parents drain their savings to pay for my wedding. Holy shit.
+1000
+ a million
That's the point at which I stopped reading. So ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't think I know anyone personally who couldn't pay $400 or even 2k for an emergency like the writer. And DH and I come from middle class families with blue collar or middle class jobs. Maybe our younger, early 20s sisters couldn't cope with emergencies, but they're just starting out and graduating.
The recipe for success in America isn't that hard. Graduate, get married and don't have kids until you're married with dual incomes.