Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not a troll post, but between investments and cash, we have a NW of 18M. I grew up with an immigrant mentality, do have a hard time believing it is enough. Also, with the stock market (majority of holdings) it feels like it can disappear/crash…how do you transition into feeling like you are ok?
What's your HHI? I wouldn't work at that NW but quitting would only mean eliminating 1% of my NW (gross). A rounding error. If you make $2M/year, then I could understand still working.
OP here. HHI is around 780k, used to be closer to 1M, but now a little less. Thanks, the "real" responses to this post are helpful.
OP here. I am 53 , DH 57
Anonymous wrote:How liquid is your $18m? I understand working if you love to work. I don't, and I'd stop at $10m.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like a dragon sitting on its hoard and guarding it, you have lost all perspective and will never feel safe, comfortable, or content. Perhaps start giving back so that you can change your awful mentality.
+1
We are hovering around 3M in our late 40s/early 50s, but don’t envy you at all. Maybe because it seems you lack empathy and awareness of the world around you. I’m definitely not motivated to work forever or much longer. I can’t relate to your hoarding behavior at all. The world has so many people in desperate need. It’s gross.
You don’t really know how much she gives away. We give away 10% of our pretax income every year (and pay close to 50% of our income in taxes) but the stock market has been so insane for the past 15 years that the money just has grown insanely. We drive beat up cars, send our kids to public school, have never stayed at a Four Seasons or similar fancy pants place, and buy most of our clothes at places like Costco and Target. We don’t pay for house cleaners or lawn care or really eat out much or drink wine or play golf or buy jewelry or fly first class or have any other expensive habits. We give away a six figure number every year and I expect we’ll give away more when we die. But I don’t want to give it all away now and then not have money for assisted living, or to pay for medical care if one of my kids gets some rare illness. I don’t think that makes me Smaug.
People OP is a troll post. She is not giving away money. There is no way she saved that in stocks with her salary and spend and ages.
lol, 12:02. OP here. Not a troll post. Thank you for all of the sincere responses, it is helpful to hear. Yes, we do give to charities. We underspent the majority of DHs career.
Anonymous wrote:We have about $8M, so not as much, and are late/mid-40s with three kids two still in elementary.
I’m an executive working for PE-backed exits every 4-5 years and with luck will do that 3-4 more times before retiring.
To me it’s the competition that drives me. I suppose if I found another way to compete at a high level I might retire sooner and do that, but right now succeeding in business feeds the competitive spirit. I think a lot of better off people feel this way. I like to ski and hike and fish and travel, etc., but that doesn’t get the competitive juices flowing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like a dragon sitting on its hoard and guarding it, you have lost all perspective and will never feel safe, comfortable, or content. Perhaps start giving back so that you can change your awful mentality.
+1
We are hovering around 3M in our late 40s/early 50s, but don’t envy you at all. Maybe because it seems you lack empathy and awareness of the world around you. I’m definitely not motivated to work forever or much longer. I can’t relate to your hoarding behavior at all. The world has so many people in desperate need. It’s gross.
You don’t really know how much she gives away. We give away 10% of our pretax income every year (and pay close to 50% of our income in taxes) but the stock market has been so insane for the past 15 years that the money just has grown insanely. We drive beat up cars, send our kids to public school, have never stayed at a Four Seasons or similar fancy pants place, and buy most of our clothes at places like Costco and Target. We don’t pay for house cleaners or lawn care or really eat out much or drink wine or play golf or buy jewelry or fly first class or have any other expensive habits. We give away a six figure number every year and I expect we’ll give away more when we die. But I don’t want to give it all away now and then not have money for assisted living, or to pay for medical care if one of my kids gets some rare illness. I don’t think that makes me Smaug.
People OP is a troll post. She is not giving away money. There is no way she saved that in stocks with her salary and spend and ages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like a dragon sitting on its hoard and guarding it, you have lost all perspective and will never feel safe, comfortable, or content. Perhaps start giving back so that you can change your awful mentality.
+1
We are hovering around 3M in our late 40s/early 50s, but don’t envy you at all. Maybe because it seems you lack empathy and awareness of the world around you. I’m definitely not motivated to work forever or much longer. I can’t relate to your hoarding behavior at all. The world has so many people in desperate need. It’s gross.
You don’t really know how much she gives away. We give away 10% of our pretax income every year (and pay close to 50% of our income in taxes) but the stock market has been so insane for the past 15 years that the money just has grown insanely. We drive beat up cars, send our kids to public school, have never stayed at a Four Seasons or similar fancy pants place, and buy most of our clothes at places like Costco and Target. We don’t pay for house cleaners or lawn care or really eat out much or drink wine or play golf or buy jewelry or fly first class or have any other expensive habits. We give away a six figure number every year and I expect we’ll give away more when we die. But I don’t want to give it all away now and then not have money for assisted living, or to pay for medical care if one of my kids gets some rare illness. I don’t think that makes me Smaug.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like a dragon sitting on its hoard and guarding it, you have lost all perspective and will never feel safe, comfortable, or content. Perhaps start giving back so that you can change your awful mentality.
+1
We are hovering around 3M in our late 40s/early 50s, but don’t envy you at all. Maybe because it seems you lack empathy and awareness of the world around you. I’m definitely not motivated to work forever or much longer. I can’t relate to your hoarding behavior at all. The world has so many people in desperate need. It’s gross.