Anonymous wrote:Mine didn’t change at all - bc once you hit $1, race for $2 is on. And then oh look the market hiccups so now you’re back below $2 and need to get up there again. IMO the hamster wheel doesn’t stop spinning.
Anonymous wrote:I just retired at 57 with about $6M plus $2M home fully paid off. I don’t feel rich. Make dinners at home usually, drive Honda and stay in Marriotts. Vacations about $15-$25 a year, which is largest expense. Kids education is funded and not part of $6M. It takes a lot to be wealthy these days, which isn’t me. But certainly happy where am I financially and also grateful.
Anonymous wrote:I went to the financial calculator. To have the buying power of a million dollars back in 1980, you would need approx. $3.6 M in todays currency. Seems about right.Anonymous wrote:4 million is the new 1 million so 1 million means nothing
Anonymous wrote:For us, hitting $1m in savings was very exciting. It didn't change our life at all - we kept working and saving and getting on with our lives. The hope is to retire at 65 and 63 with about $4m, including $1m home, which we will sell and downsize (not yet sure to where, and, we have time to figure that out).
We are not "DCUM rich," although we realize how lucky we are. Our 2 cars (workhorses) are both over 12 years old, our kids are in public school (and walk there, they do not have cars), we eat 95% of meals at home (dinner together as a family when the kids are not at an activity), and our vacations are not extravagant (VRBO, not hotels, mostly so we can cook some meals at home)