Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:not everyone has a libido that requires regular sex.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work with dozens of these people (something about the career I'm in.) They are in their thirties, have good jobs, do not date and live with their parents. Generally the parents are immigrants (either Eastern Europe or Mexico.) In fact I am the only 30 something in my workplace who is married with children.
They all act like they're living the dream because they don't pay a mortgage or rent, have food waiting for them at home and lots of disposable income.
I am the $200K poster from above living with parents. I absolutely feel like it’s living the dream. Do you know how easy it is to get ahead when you can save $130K a year (as one person, not a household)? And still have fresh home-cooked food and no stress every day?
Of course, the dating relationships are completely nonexistent. I hope to semi-retire early, buy a house/condo for cash, and then focus on that part of life. But I have thought about this a lot, and I have no idea whatsoever how people work at six-figure jobs, maintain a house and do all chores, and raise a family at the same time. That seems like a superhuman task, and the dissatisfaction that is discussed so much in the relationship forum underscores that it’s not realistic for a lot of people.
There should be greater acceptance of the different energy levels that exist within humans, and not being able to “do it all” at once should not mean that one has failed to launch.
Getting ahead of whom? You have no regular sex just for the sake of buying a condo at some point?
+1
I don’t think I’ve had sex since maybe 2018? I don’t miss it at all.
You and the 200k man child are not normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:not everyone has a libido that requires regular sex.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work with dozens of these people (something about the career I'm in.) They are in their thirties, have good jobs, do not date and live with their parents. Generally the parents are immigrants (either Eastern Europe or Mexico.) In fact I am the only 30 something in my workplace who is married with children.
They all act like they're living the dream because they don't pay a mortgage or rent, have food waiting for them at home and lots of disposable income.
I am the $200K poster from above living with parents. I absolutely feel like it’s living the dream. Do you know how easy it is to get ahead when you can save $130K a year (as one person, not a household)? And still have fresh home-cooked food and no stress every day?
Of course, the dating relationships are completely nonexistent. I hope to semi-retire early, buy a house/condo for cash, and then focus on that part of life. But I have thought about this a lot, and I have no idea whatsoever how people work at six-figure jobs, maintain a house and do all chores, and raise a family at the same time. That seems like a superhuman task, and the dissatisfaction that is discussed so much in the relationship forum underscores that it’s not realistic for a lot of people.
There should be greater acceptance of the different energy levels that exist within humans, and not being able to “do it all” at once should not mean that one has failed to launch.
Getting ahead of whom? You have no regular sex just for the sake of buying a condo at some point?
+1
I don’t think I’ve had sex since maybe 2018? I don’t miss it at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I immigrated from a culture where most people live in multi-generational families. In our society, no one fails to launch. People may not be earning a living but those who are at home are taking care of the home, family and social obligations.
My brother lost his job 5 yrs ago. He is 60 now. His wife is the breadwinner. He does projects at home. House repair, additions, medical care, veggi garden, selling of property, consolidating investments. He is busy as hell and will rake in big amounts of money with selling his property (he used to buy land for cheap at one point in life).
Thank you. The entire concept of failure to launch is based on an American standard that every generation should live in their own separate home.
Exactly. No drama or lazy freeloaders in the tight knit villages and old country. No way Jose!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work with dozens of these people (something about the career I'm in.) They are in their thirties, have good jobs, do not date and live with their parents. Generally the parents are immigrants (either Eastern Europe or Mexico.) In fact I am the only 30 something in my workplace who is married with children.
They all act like they're living the dream because they don't pay a mortgage or rent, have food waiting for them at home and lots of disposable income.
I am the $200K poster from above living with parents. I absolutely feel like it’s living the dream. Do you know how easy it is to get ahead when you can save $130K a year (as one person, not a household)? And still have fresh home-cooked food and no stress every day?
Of course, the dating relationships are completely nonexistent. I hope to semi-retire early, buy a house/condo for cash, and then focus on that part of life. But I have thought about this a lot, and I have no idea whatsoever how people work at six-figure jobs, maintain a house and do all chores, and raise a family at the same time. That seems like a superhuman task, and the dissatisfaction that is discussed so much in the relationship forum underscores that it’s not realistic for a lot of people.
There should be greater acceptance of the different energy levels that exist within humans, and not being able to “do it all” at once should not mean that one has failed to launch.
Getting ahead of whom? You have no regular sex just for the sake of buying a condo at some point?
Anonymous wrote:not everyone has a libido that requires regular sex.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work with dozens of these people (something about the career I'm in.) They are in their thirties, have good jobs, do not date and live with their parents. Generally the parents are immigrants (either Eastern Europe or Mexico.) In fact I am the only 30 something in my workplace who is married with children.
They all act like they're living the dream because they don't pay a mortgage or rent, have food waiting for them at home and lots of disposable income.
I am the $200K poster from above living with parents. I absolutely feel like it’s living the dream. Do you know how easy it is to get ahead when you can save $130K a year (as one person, not a household)? And still have fresh home-cooked food and no stress every day?
Of course, the dating relationships are completely nonexistent. I hope to semi-retire early, buy a house/condo for cash, and then focus on that part of life. But I have thought about this a lot, and I have no idea whatsoever how people work at six-figure jobs, maintain a house and do all chores, and raise a family at the same time. That seems like a superhuman task, and the dissatisfaction that is discussed so much in the relationship forum underscores that it’s not realistic for a lot of people.
There should be greater acceptance of the different energy levels that exist within humans, and not being able to “do it all” at once should not mean that one has failed to launch.
Getting ahead of whom? You have no regular sex just for the sake of buying a condo at some point?
not everyone has a libido that requires regular sex.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work with dozens of these people (something about the career I'm in.) They are in their thirties, have good jobs, do not date and live with their parents. Generally the parents are immigrants (either Eastern Europe or Mexico.) In fact I am the only 30 something in my workplace who is married with children.
They all act like they're living the dream because they don't pay a mortgage or rent, have food waiting for them at home and lots of disposable income.
I am the $200K poster from above living with parents. I absolutely feel like it’s living the dream. Do you know how easy it is to get ahead when you can save $130K a year (as one person, not a household)? And still have fresh home-cooked food and no stress every day?
Of course, the dating relationships are completely nonexistent. I hope to semi-retire early, buy a house/condo for cash, and then focus on that part of life. But I have thought about this a lot, and I have no idea whatsoever how people work at six-figure jobs, maintain a house and do all chores, and raise a family at the same time. That seems like a superhuman task, and the dissatisfaction that is discussed so much in the relationship forum underscores that it’s not realistic for a lot of people.
There should be greater acceptance of the different energy levels that exist within humans, and not being able to “do it all” at once should not mean that one has failed to launch.
Getting ahead of whom? You have no regular sex just for the sake of buying a condo at some point?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread overlooks all the people who only “launched” because of massive parental support: no educational debt, funded apartment in the city after college, job connections through family & friends from private, weddings paid for, downpayments gifted, college funds & private tuition filled by parents and no need to worry about saving for retirement.
I know plenty of rich thirty and forty somethings who do nothing but smoke weed with trust fund money in a house owned by their family. I'd say they're FTL. They're just not suffering financially.
I'm sure you do. Because there's so many rich people all over the place smoking weed all day![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work with dozens of these people (something about the career I'm in.) They are in their thirties, have good jobs, do not date and live with their parents. Generally the parents are immigrants (either Eastern Europe or Mexico.) In fact I am the only 30 something in my workplace who is married with children.
They all act like they're living the dream because they don't pay a mortgage or rent, have food waiting for them at home and lots of disposable income.
I am the $200K poster from above living with parents. I absolutely feel like it’s living the dream. Do you know how easy it is to get ahead when you can save $130K a year (as one person, not a household)? And still have fresh home-cooked food and no stress every day?
Of course, the dating relationships are completely nonexistent. I hope to semi-retire early, buy a house/condo for cash, and then focus on that part of life. But I have thought about this a lot, and I have no idea whatsoever how people work at six-figure jobs, maintain a house and do all chores, and raise a family at the same time. That seems like a superhuman task, and the dissatisfaction that is discussed so much in the relationship forum underscores that it’s not realistic for a lot of people.
There should be greater acceptance of the different energy levels that exist within humans, and not being able to “do it all” at once should not mean that one has failed to launch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of kids are getting to college only to be completely exhausted. They have been pushed so hard from an early age to excel. College (or their first "real job") is built up to the point that it is supposed to be everything. These kids go to college (or into the workplace) and are underwhelmed. Is this all there is? I worked so hard all those years for this? everyone always told me this would be the best thing ever. I feel betrayed, and disappointed that I fell for all that growing up. It's a sham.
That is what they are thinking.
You have to really set expectations properly for your kids. Work is boring, stressful and underwhelming. But they need to know what they get from working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work with dozens of these people (something about the career I'm in.) They are in their thirties, have good jobs, do not date and live with their parents. Generally the parents are immigrants (either Eastern Europe or Mexico.) In fact I am the only 30 something in my workplace who is married with children.
They all act like they're living the dream because they don't pay a mortgage or rent, have food waiting for them at home and lots of disposable income.
I am the $200K poster from above living with parents. I absolutely feel like it’s living the dream. Do you know how easy it is to get ahead when you can save $130K a year (as one person, not a household)? And still have fresh home-cooked food and no stress every day?
Of course, the dating relationships are completely nonexistent. I hope to semi-retire early, buy a house/condo for cash, and then focus on that part of life. But I have thought about this a lot, and I have no idea whatsoever how people work at six-figure jobs, maintain a house and do all chores, and raise a family at the same time. That seems like a superhuman task, and the dissatisfaction that is discussed so much in the relationship forum underscores that it’s not realistic for a lot of people.
There should be greater acceptance of the different energy levels that exist within humans, and not being able to “do it all” at once should not mean that one has failed to launch.
Anonymous wrote:I work with dozens of these people (something about the career I'm in.) They are in their thirties, have good jobs, do not date and live with their parents. Generally the parents are immigrants (either Eastern Europe or Mexico.) In fact I am the only 30 something in my workplace who is married with children.
They all act like they're living the dream because they don't pay a mortgage or rent, have food waiting for them at home and lots of disposable income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do think American norms that everyone has to have a paying job (ie, “launch”) is unhealthy. Who then has time to cook, take care of family, house, etc. which is we rely on plastic disposable packages, processed foods, outsource childcare, too many unruly students who are poor at reading and math.
I think most of us would agree that the ability to be self-supporting is a key element of having launched, and most of us can make ourselves dinner after working a full day.
No, I absolutely do not have energy to make dinner (and everything that goes along with it - grocery shopping, washing pots and pans, etc.) after working a full day. I live with my parents because of this, but I make $200K. Did I fail to launch?
Yes, you did. Please never ever get married and have children - if you are a man, you can't imagine what you might have to do after working a full day when you have kids. If you are a woman, you'll be working 24/7, there will be no "after working".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do think American norms that everyone has to have a paying job (ie, “launch”) is unhealthy. Who then has time to cook, take care of family, house, etc. which is we rely on plastic disposable packages, processed foods, outsource childcare, too many unruly students who are poor at reading and math.
I think most of us would agree that the ability to be self-supporting is a key element of having launched, and most of us can make ourselves dinner after working a full day.
No, I absolutely do not have energy to make dinner (and everything that goes along with it - grocery shopping, washing pots and pans, etc.) after working a full day. I live with my parents because of this, but I make $200K. Did I fail to launch?