Anonymous wrote:You think someone with 1m annual income is going to be satisfied retiring for 30+ years on 5m? You are off by an order of magnitude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the people who spend $ on luxuries for themselves but send their kids to public. Good priorities there.
Is always a private education better? I want my kids feeling comfortable with people who has different income levels than themselves, having friends with different racial and ethical backgrounds. I went to a private school (independent school as they are called nowadays) and it was very homogenious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely the fear is sustainability. That's a reason why I don't want to enroll my kids in private. Who knows if I can stay in BigLaw or earn the equivalent for that long! This is a big fear of mine, to be honest. I stress out about it a lot.
We are in the exact same place! DH and I are both relatively young income partners in Big Law who are still in the process of building our own practices. We make an excellent combined income right now that could easily support private school for our two children but we have them in public school because we worry about long-term sustainability. If we were doctors, we would probably feel differently. We just try to live well below our means and keep our fixed expenses as low as we can in the event our pay goes down over time.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely the fear is sustainability. That's a reason why I don't want to enroll my kids in private. Who knows if I can stay in BigLaw or earn the equivalent for that long! This is a big fear of mine, to be honest. I stress out about it a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over 450. House fully paid and no debt. Did cosmetic things to kitchen but basically unrenovated from 1950's original. Cars are 8 and 12 years old. No fancy vacations. Were prepared to pay full freight for two kids in private colleges, but they have ended up at much lower cost local for various reasons including medical. Medical costs for them are our biggest expense and these may well extend into their adulthood so ensuring they are well provided for is a major objective. We know we are well off but do not feel rich.
What's the point if you don't vacation, live nicely or do anything but go to school and the doctor's office
Anonymous wrote:Over 450. House fully paid and no debt. Did cosmetic things to kitchen but basically unrenovated from 1950's original. Cars are 8 and 12 years old. No fancy vacations. Were prepared to pay full freight for two kids in private colleges, but they have ended up at much lower cost local for various reasons including medical. Medical costs for them are our biggest expense and these may well extend into their adulthood so ensuring they are well provided for is a major objective. We know we are well off but do not feel rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have more obligations than you do. Charities, fundraisers, etc. the expectations are higher.
That's not everyone.
Anonymous wrote:I make above 450k, see my kids almost every night, work 3-5 days a week, average under 40 hrs a week.
I bill $400/hr for my niche. It's a great life.
Anonymous wrote:Our HHi varies but is around 350-450 depending on bonuses.
$3k mortgage and taxes
$400 car (finally bought a new one, DH glady drives a beater)
Maybe $1k a month home maintenance stuff
$1k a month groceries
$500 month utilities
Rest savings
So many of our work peers love paycheck to paycheck because they have the big house, the NEED the new BMW every other year, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I love the people who spend $ on luxuries for themselves but send their kids to public. Good priorities there.