Anonymous wrote:hang out on the Mr Money Mustache forum
Eliminate 1 car
Move to a cheaper cost of living area
Get clothing at thrift stores
Sidework
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don't you move? I don't get staying in the area if you can't affording housing, etc.
Not OP but in similar boat (less income, but with a kid) and we would very much like to move. Currently DH's job is tied to the area with now fully remote option. I have moved into a fully remote job over the last few years to prepare us for a move. But it's not like it's super easy to just relocate. We are in our 40s with a child, we have tons of connections to this area after going to school and then living here for over two decades. I'm still not convinced my DH won't get cold feet, and I have nerves myself. Our families are both very dysfunctional and live in extremely remote places, so the option of just moving closer to them isn't really on the table, though we are considering a city about 4 hours from his family. Figuring out how to move his job is going to be tricky and there's a strong chance he'll basically need to shift industries if we move, since what he does isn't really a thing in most LCOL areas.
We have to juggle jobs, schools, some connection to the community, making new friends and networks in our 40s. Our kid has a hobby that is important to them -- I have to make sure they can still do that in some capacity.
What people don't get is that as recently as 10-15 years ago, DC was considered a LCOL alternative to NY/LA/SF. Some of us chose it over NY or LA (I did) specifically because our money went further here and we could see building a family here after college or grad school in a way we couldn't see those other places. But then a couple poorly timed layoffs, some shifts in our industry, and Covid, and here we are living in a city that is honestly too pricy for us but at a stage in life where just picking up and moving somewhere else is much easier said than done.
"Just move" sounds obvious but if it were that easy, everyone would just do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if OP is trolling or not, but I do actually feel this way. We make less money, though -- 150k (DH 100k, me 50k). I used to make more but the reality of trying to parent kids while you both work was overwhelming. We already had no margin for error because even with an income around 200k, childcare was tight. And then Covid hit. So now I work part time and we pay less for childcare, but have a little more flexibility in our schedule. But yes, money is very tight. We've pretty much given up on the idea that we'll ever own a SFH (we live in a condo now) or feel comfortable financially.
I have a graduate degree and DH is in a STEM field with an Ivy League degree. I grew up UMC and he grew up working class, and while we've far surpassed his economic status as a kid, it's definitely been a step down for me. We've both struggle with our mental health and while there is a version of us that makes WAY more money without working that much harder, I think we just lack the confidence and social skills to make it happen? I feel overwhelmed a lot. I don't know, but I do feel downwardly mobile and can relate to the anxiety OP is galling about.
Op here. This is how I feel too. On one hand there is shame in not being able to replicate my parents success even though I was given all the opportunities and resources. Then there’s the depressing realization that we will ever be able to buy a SFH in a good neighborhood around here and I’ll never have the quality of life I grew up with or give my kids the same experiences.
A lot of people grow up and don’t become wealthy like their parents. My in-laws Ivy League, very wealthy. Not us though and it doesn’t bother us in the least. We are lucky that they are the most generous and kindness people in the world. He retired early and bought us a house, gifting every year, paid for all activities and tuitions for our kids, not just monetarily, they are also there for their children. They are proud of their children, none went to Ivy League or reached their level of financial success.
If your parents are wealthy hopefully they can help with the kids. Just don’t try and be something you’re not. Don’t overreach and buy in a neighborhood you can’t afford. If you stop feeling sorry for yourself your kids will have their own childhood, not a replica of yours.
If your ILs bought you a home, you are wealthy. They'll probably also help with kid's education, right? So all you and your husband need to do is make enough money to cover living expense (minus mortgage) and save for retirement. That would be so easy.
Not all UMC or wealthy parents are generous like that, either. You are lucky, but you need to understand how unusual your situation is. You're in a really ideal situation.
x10000
Seems the norm around here that grandparents pay for their kids' houses and education, and their grandchildrens' houses and education. Holy crap - you people who have that are completely out of touch and only expect more - if you were my kids, I would donate every penny to a charity that actually needs it.
My kids grandparents only play favorites. It is sickening. I can't fathom having such generous people in our lives. Just wow.
It isn't the norm. I've known 2 people who had help paying for a home. The vast majority of the people I know, scrimped and saved and didn't blow money stupidly because they knew homeownership was expensive and important. They did without to buy a townhome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because I grew up UMC, it is really sad and depressing for me to be middle class/lower middle class financially as a mid thirties woman. I make 110k and my husband makes 100k or so. I feel myself sliding into the dreaded MC life and it terrifies me. I always assumed I’d be upwardly mobile.
$200 000+/per annum not middle Class. Middle class us $50,000/per annum.
Actually this depends on the number of people in the household.
Anonymous wrote:We're all working to stay out of poverty. I fear homelessness and poverty. My rent is now nearly 50% of my income. My credit rating is excellen at 807. Yet I could only qualify for an 8% rate on a car loan. A better rate of 6% made the difference of $6 a month. In the past, I would pay 0% on a 3 year car loan for a Toyota Corolla or similar car.
It's not your imagination OP.
It's inflation thrusting many of us into a completely different class.
It's very real and very frightening. I have always suspected certain leaders want only a few wealthy people and very many poor people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if OP is trolling or not, but I do actually feel this way. We make less money, though -- 150k (DH 100k, me 50k). I used to make more but the reality of trying to parent kids while you both work was overwhelming. We already had no margin for error because even with an income around 200k, childcare was tight. And then Covid hit. So now I work part time and we pay less for childcare, but have a little more flexibility in our schedule. But yes, money is very tight. We've pretty much given up on the idea that we'll ever own a SFH (we live in a condo now) or feel comfortable financially.
I have a graduate degree and DH is in a STEM field with an Ivy League degree. I grew up UMC and he grew up working class, and while we've far surpassed his economic status as a kid, it's definitely been a step down for me. We've both struggle with our mental health and while there is a version of us that makes WAY more money without working that much harder, I think we just lack the confidence and social skills to make it happen? I feel overwhelmed a lot. I don't know, but I do feel downwardly mobile and can relate to the anxiety OP is galling about.
It’s wild to me how much we now require people to “hustle” to have middle class lives in major metros. My grandfather was a teacher. Supported Grandma and sent 3 kids to college.
Owned a modest ranch home in a major metro, worked part time in the summers, good healthcare, nice pension, traveled in his retirement, had enough to pay for very nice assisted living accommodations in his 80s.
Never owned fancy things (or cared) but good quality of life.
Now, his life is elite.
Cost of living has greatly exceeded pay, for the current generation. Everything - college, homes, everything was relatively cheaper. I don't think Boomers have any idea how good they had it.
People who graduated in the early 80’s faced high unemployment rates and 18% mortgage rates. People a little bit older faced civil unrest and Vietnam where 50,000 of their peers were killed in swampy jungles.
Put it in perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if OP is trolling or not, but I do actually feel this way. We make less money, though -- 150k (DH 100k, me 50k). I used to make more but the reality of trying to parent kids while you both work was overwhelming. We already had no margin for error because even with an income around 200k, childcare was tight. And then Covid hit. So now I work part time and we pay less for childcare, but have a little more flexibility in our schedule. But yes, money is very tight. We've pretty much given up on the idea that we'll ever own a SFH (we live in a condo now) or feel comfortable financially.
I have a graduate degree and DH is in a STEM field with an Ivy League degree. I grew up UMC and he grew up working class, and while we've far surpassed his economic status as a kid, it's definitely been a step down for me. We've both struggle with our mental health and while there is a version of us that makes WAY more money without working that much harder, I think we just lack the confidence and social skills to make it happen? I feel overwhelmed a lot. I don't know, but I do feel downwardly mobile and can relate to the anxiety OP is galling about.
Op here. This is how I feel too. On one hand there is shame in not being able to replicate my parents success even though I was given all the opportunities and resources. Then there’s the depressing realization that we will ever be able to buy a SFH in a good neighborhood around here and I’ll never have the quality of life I grew up with or give my kids the same experiences.
A lot of people grow up and don’t become wealthy like their parents. My in-laws Ivy League, very wealthy. Not us though and it doesn’t bother us in the least. We are lucky that they are the most generous and kindness people in the world. He retired early and bought us a house, gifting every year, paid for all activities and tuitions for our kids, not just monetarily, they are also there for their children. They are proud of their children, none went to Ivy League or reached their level of financial success.
If your parents are wealthy hopefully they can help with the kids. Just don’t try and be something you’re not. Don’t overreach and buy in a neighborhood you can’t afford. If you stop feeling sorry for yourself your kids will have their own childhood, not a replica of yours.
If your ILs bought you a home, you are wealthy. They'll probably also help with kid's education, right? So all you and your husband need to do is make enough money to cover living expense (minus mortgage) and save for retirement. That would be so easy.
Not all UMC or wealthy parents are generous like that, either. You are lucky, but you need to understand how unusual your situation is. You're in a really ideal situation.
x10000
Seems the norm around here that grandparents pay for their kids' houses and education, and their grandchildrens' houses and education. Holy crap - you people who have that are completely out of touch and only expect more - if you were my kids, I would donate every penny to a charity that actually needs it.
My kids grandparents only play favorites. It is sickening. I can't fathom having such generous people in our lives. Just wow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When the middle class are in food lines is the political game plan to shame them by how much worse other people have it?
The plan, per usual, is to pretend they don’t exist. They’ve done this with the homeless, disabled veterans, and drug addicts. Next will be the working class and the middle class and anyone who doesn’t use “summer” as a verb.
Anonymous wrote:NP. My main concern is the cost of paying for college for multiple kids, preferably at the schools that they want to attend. I know things could be a lot worse, though. If nothing else, they could attend locally while living at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if OP is trolling or not, but I do actually feel this way. We make less money, though -- 150k (DH 100k, me 50k). I used to make more but the reality of trying to parent kids while you both work was overwhelming. We already had no margin for error because even with an income around 200k, childcare was tight. And then Covid hit. So now I work part time and we pay less for childcare, but have a little more flexibility in our schedule. But yes, money is very tight. We've pretty much given up on the idea that we'll ever own a SFH (we live in a condo now) or feel comfortable financially.
I have a graduate degree and DH is in a STEM field with an Ivy League degree. I grew up UMC and he grew up working class, and while we've far surpassed his economic status as a kid, it's definitely been a step down for me. We've both struggle with our mental health and while there is a version of us that makes WAY more money without working that much harder, I think we just lack the confidence and social skills to make it happen? I feel overwhelmed a lot. I don't know, but I do feel downwardly mobile and can relate to the anxiety OP is galling about.
It’s wild to me how much we now require people to “hustle” to have middle class lives in major metros. My grandfather was a teacher. Supported Grandma and sent 3 kids to college.
Owned a modest ranch home in a major metro, worked part time in the summers, good healthcare, nice pension, traveled in his retirement, had enough to pay for very nice assisted living accommodations in his 80s.
Never owned fancy things (or cared) but good quality of life.
Now, his life is elite.
How many tvs did they own and how often did they buy a new car, eat out, take vacations that involved airline and hotels, pay for education/tutoring/travel sports, media, etc? Mine had one tv with an antenna (three channels), radios with a record player, never used outside help, bought two cars and held on to them until they were junk, sent us to public, etc. Pension yes middle class yes but "elite" lifestyle, no way.
I'm the PP at the top of this chain and I just wanted to note that we have one TV and it is almost 15 years old. We have one car and just replaced it (old one was 14 years old and the "new" one is a used 2019). We mostly take vacations that don't involve airlines and no one in our family is travel sports or has a tutor for anything.
I say this not to complain, but to say that the assumption that middle class people to day have all that stuff is not accurate, especially in the DMV. In a LCOL area where you can buy a 4 bedroom house for 250k, maybe -- people there will have a lot more disposable income. But they'll usually also make a lot less.
But on top of all that, we don't have a SAHP, a SFH (even a modest one), or a pension on the way. We have just two kids and while I love my kids more than anything, I sometimes wonder if it was irresponsible to have the second because college costs terrify me.
So the PP's grandfather's lifestyle, on a teacher's salary and pension, actually sounds significantly more stable and luxurious than how we live. We have no margin for error at all. Maybe I was naive, but it came as a surprise to me because my parents were able to build modest wealth via pretty regular jobs and some fortunate real estate purchases. It feels like our margins are much slimmer than those of prior generations.
Anonymous wrote:You are either stupid or lazy AF. We only make 150k combined but have 2 houses, 1 a rental and live very comfortably with plenty in savings and money set aside for retirement and college. Our kids are in 2 sports and we make out fine. Now, we do not eat out much, make impulse spending mistakes or spends thousands on clothes. We do vacation to fun spots but not mega budget busters like Europe or beyond. We are saving to go to Europe next year hough and it will not break our bank. You have to be smart and humble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because I grew up UMC, it is really sad and depressing for me to be middle class/lower middle class financially as a mid thirties woman. I make 110k and my husband makes 100k or so. I feel myself sliding into the dreaded MC life and it terrifies me. I always assumed I’d be upwardly mobile.
$200 000+/per annum not middle Class. Middle class us $50,000/per annum.