Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mainly feel the guilt when I spend money on food & drinks. I always said when I was growing up poor that I wouldn't skimp on nice shoes & clothes when I could afford it. I don't and I feel zero guilt there. However, it's been a process to train myself not to fret over the restaurant prices too much. Mainly because in the back of my mind I'm still thinking "$15 for ONE cheeseburger bought us food for a week when I was a kid!"
I posted in the other thread today that I still can't bring myself to order soda in a restaurant. I always order water or have a cocktail/wine (which again, guilt!).
It also shocks me how every kid gets braces now. I mean, my niece just got stage one at age 8! That was really unheard of when I was growing up as you usually got them in middle school. And, only the rich kids got braces. Everyone I grew up with who was poor and had crooked teeth got adult braces once they had some money! I was lucky enough to have perfectly straight top teeth and only slightly crooked bottom teeth.
Another thing that was hard to get used to was how much vacations cost. It's still hard to wrap my mind around paying $2000+ for a few days at the beach when growing up we had to scrounge and hustle to make our $800 monthly rent.
Same thing with us and vacations.
I haven’t added it up but even just ball parking it, we’ll spend 50k on vacations this year.
That’s actually a splurge I don’t feel bad about - I want to see the world and I want my kids to see it too.
However, they’re not coming from a childhood like mine that will give them the perspective of how fortunate they really are.
They think it’s totally normal to go to Europe, the Caribbean, skiing out West every year...
Kind of a shame. My kid actually asked me if we are poor the other day, lol. (We make over 700k)
+1
My kids think it’s totalky normal to travel like this too. I’m pretty sure 2/3 of their private school class took at least a 7 day trip to Europe this summer if not 2-3 full weeks.
We make that kind of money (750k) and we’re the poor ones because we don’t have a second or third home, a house in the water, a boat, etc.
well, why don't you? with that kind of money you should.
Anonymous wrote:Not what I spend money on, but the things I buy and don't even need.
I grew up in Soviet Union and the stores had bare minimum when it came to stuff. You were able to find winter boots if you got really lucky ad ofcourse you had to go to the city for that. Local store had mostly milk, bread and meat products. We were not short of money, we were all short of stuff to buy. Most people made their own socks, scarves, sweaters. Clothes were patched up, reused or handed down. Shoes were always too big, too small or had holes in them. Some parents were better than other chasing down new winter boots. Many fights in the stores. Amazing how little we needed and at the time we didn't even recognize that we were poor because everybody was the same and we always had food.
We were shown a lot of conflicts all over the world with tanks rolling down the street. This put it all to respective- we had a good life. Unless it was cold, we found the hole in the shoe a funny thing. Well, once we got home at least. My kids don't want to listen to my "Russian stories".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, though for me, it’s mostly labor/time-savers and vacations. I’m finally at the point that paying to have someone clean my home before a party is palatable. And I can go on vacation without calculating how many hours I need to work overtime to pay for it.
It's the labor savers that highlight how different I am from my parents. My parents would never have spent money on house cleaners, lawn mowing, grocery delivery, etc.
Hear, hear. I felt really guilty about hiring cleaners. It just wasn't done in the little town where I grew up, not by very middle class folks like us.
Anonymous wrote:We weren’t totally poor but lived paycheck to paycheck and had little left for non-essentials. The biggest thing that shocks me now is travel. We never traveled as a kid, and the rare times we did it was in the car and to the Comfort Inn. My kids are in ES and have no concept of what it’s like to not travel regularly by air. It bothers me - they are nice kids but don’t know how fortunate they are. We tell them, but they don’t “get it.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, though for me, it’s mostly labor/time-savers and vacations. I’m finally at the point that paying to have someone clean my home before a party is palatable. And I can go on vacation without calculating how many hours I need to work overtime to pay for it.
It's the labor savers that highlight how different I am from my parents. My parents would never have spent money on house cleaners, lawn mowing, grocery delivery, etc.