Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was telling me the other day that the poor kids in school have all got $100 or $200 trainers, while many of the rich kids are wearing $45 sneakers.
Not of course a main reason that poor people stay poor, but poor choices on conspicuous consumption is not always irrelevant either.
When you can never attain the big thing (house, neighborhood, full college tuition) you splurge on the small thing (sneakers, phone, clothes, maybe ever a more expensive car).
High school friend of mine has lower HHI, both kids at private school on financial aid, small house with a big mortgage. But every bite of food for the family will come from Whole Foods. So that’s covered at least!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was telling me the other day that the poor kids in school have all got $100 or $200 trainers, while many of the rich kids are wearing $45 sneakers.
Not of course a main reason that poor people stay poor, but poor choices on conspicuous consumption is not always irrelevant either.
When you can never attain the big thing (house, neighborhood, full college tuition) you splurge on the small thing (sneakers, phone, clothes, maybe ever a more expensive car).
Anonymous wrote:My kid was telling me the other day that the poor kids in school have all got $100 or $200 trainers, while many of the rich kids are wearing $45 sneakers.
Not of course a main reason that poor people stay poor, but poor choices on conspicuous consumption is not always irrelevant either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Children
I see many people make the mistake of overspending on their children. I understand they want their kids to have a certain type of childhood, but what looks like a middle class lifestyle costs so much more than it used to.
+1. We did this. Private school starting in Kindergarten. Our kids do expensive sports, and we have allowed multiple private lessons per week, in addition to travel teams, etc. Also, we felt we had to give them sleepaway camp, ski vacations, etc. Then, we kept the "nanny" as a housekeeper when our kids were teens, just to make sure someone was at the house to supervise, make snacks, and try to keep the kids off of screens. Now we are confronting how much we spent over the years. We have a small house and modest vehicles, but live in a nice neighborhood. We don't have a big net worth at all, but we're fine to work as long as we can, as we like working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Children
I see many people make the mistake of overspending on their children. I understand they want their kids to have a certain type of childhood, but what looks like a middle class lifestyle costs so much more than it used to.
Anonymous wrote:Divorce
working in a dead end job
marrying the wrong person
starting over at 47
unable to save due to debt
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being too frugal that I don't value my own time and mental stamina despite having more than enough income to outsource most work / labor.
this habit kept you stupid, not poor
Anonymous wrote:Beer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:anyone making 100k is poor
Depends where you live & your household size
Anonymous wrote:Not being paid enough.
- a teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Getting married and having children really clipped my income/career progression. I know a lot of people who pull it off successfully but I did not. Throw in some bad luck (children's health) and we never managed to get ahead of the curve.
My only positive trait has been that I am cheap as the day is long. I would have comfortably quit working years ago if I was single.
How did marrying, except for having kids, hurt your income progression?