Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not shocked at what I spend money on, but that I can easily afford every day expenses: new clothes, shoes, field trips, lunch money, etc. I honestly don't even budget for it; if my kids need something they get it. They do not have to find odd jobs, save and scrap to buy school clothes or sports uniform items.
I am so happy to be able to send my son to Peru with his Spanish Club. I so badly wanted to travel with my high school friends, but it was simply too expensive.
Do you worry about what that will do to them though, in terms of learning to provide for themselves? Or are you pretty much setting them up for life financially, so if they aren't able to support themselves, they have a nice little safety net?
Not that PP, but buying kids what they need is very different than making sure they know how to provide for themselves as an adult. My parents did not always supply my needs. I had three pairs of shoes all of HS. I often walked 90 min or more to save the bus fare. So when it rained or snowed, I had to wrap trash bags around my feet. This caused me a lot of anxiety and distracted me from school work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents didn't/couldn't get me braces as a kid.
I paid in cash as an adult for braces with one of the priciest orthodontists in downtown.
Did they work? I thought late in life, teeth are prone to sliding after. Which is why veneers are so popular.
Yep, they worked great.
How long did you wear braces? Did you have to wear a long while retainer after? They didn’t slide back at all?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We weren’t totally poor but lived paycheck to paycheck and had little left for non-essentials. The biggest thing that shocks me now is travel. We never traveled as a kid, and the rare times we did it was in the car and to the Comfort Inn. My kids are in ES and have no concept of what it’s like to not travel regularly by air. It bothers me - they are nice kids but don’t know how fortunate they are. We tell them, but they don’t “get it.”
There is a way to control this. Skip a vacation or 2 just bc. On 1 vacation stay at a Hampton Inn instead of your usual 5 star. Take a road trip or 2. That shows that travel isn't a requirement and fancy travel is a luxury. But let me guess you can't do this bc YOU don't want to be inconvenienced or slumming it -- so instead you're just lecture your kids and hope they get it which 99.9% of the time, they don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, though for me, it’s mostly labor/time-savers and vacations. I’m finally at the point that paying to have someone clean my home before a party is palatable. And I can go on vacation without calculating how many hours I need to work overtime to pay for it.
It's the labor savers that highlight how different I am from my parents. My parents would never have spent money on house cleaners, lawn mowing, grocery delivery, etc.
This is a new thing though. I grew up in an upper middle class area where most dads were CPAs, engineers, doctors, lawyers, etc and they ALL still mowed their lawn. Our house was set on 1.5 areas too and my dad was out there twice a week like clockwork. Now it seems like even middle class neighborhoods are all mowed by companies.
Our street is still like this. HHI is $300k+ easily and I’d still say at least 1/2 the neighbors do their own lawn, including us. My DH takes pride in it.
Anonymous wrote:Not shocked so much as incredibly thankful that my kids don't have to live the way I did.
No pretending with your friends that you saw the latest episode of The Simpsons when really you have no idea what happened because you either didn't have power or cable. No having to pull your girl scout troop leader to the side and tell her that she couldn't call you with more details because your phone had been cut off. No couch surfing with relatives because you got evicted. No babying a pair of new shoes because you knew when they were ruined/wore out that it meant thrift store shoes for your next pair that school year. No lying about what you got for Christmas because in reality you just got a new pair of jeans or a sweatshirt if anything at all. No starting off the school year with a lie of an awesome vacation you took as your "what I did over the summer" because you didn't go anywhere or do anything.
It blew my kid's mind when they asked why 95% of the pictures I have from my childhood were LifeTouch photos that say PROOF on them and I told them it was because a) we didn't have money for a camera and b) we didn't have money to purchase those photo packages from the school. I think that's when they really understood that when I say I grew up poor, I meant it and it wasn't just something I said as a mom.
Anonymous wrote:I was LMC, so not food insecure, but it struck me when my kids were picking out clothes for their first day of school how they have sooooo many material things. I was terribly insecure (and still am) since I never felt like I had the right clothes. My kids are much more confident - may just be their personalities - but I was appreciating that they'll probably never be embarrassed that their mom buys them a knock-off version of the latest fad, and they have to wear it or her feelings will be hurt (coca-cola shirt with no logo, anyone?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents didn't/couldn't get me braces as a kid.
I paid in cash as an adult for braces with one of the priciest orthodontists in downtown.
Did they work? I thought late in life, teeth are prone to sliding after. Which is why veneers are so popular.
Yep, they worked great.
Anonymous wrote:I think of this when I buy my kids shoes. We weren't poor but my parents were very frugal and shoes were strictly from Payless or K-Mart. My teens are generally not into clothes and have pretty small wardrobes but they care about their shoe brands and I don't mind spending $150+ for a pair of running shoes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, though for me, it’s mostly labor/time-savers and vacations. I’m finally at the point that paying to have someone clean my home before a party is palatable. And I can go on vacation without calculating how many hours I need to work overtime to pay for it.
It's the labor savers that highlight how different I am from my parents. My parents would never have spent money on house cleaners, lawn mowing, grocery delivery, etc.
This is a new thing though. I grew up in an upper middle class area where most dads were CPAs, engineers, doctors, lawyers, etc and they ALL still mowed their lawn. Our house was set on 1.5 areas too and my dad was out there twice a week like clockwork. Now it seems like even middle class neighborhoods are all mowed by companies.
I still can't do it. I am squarely UMC, and I am the only person on our block, and the only person I know, who mows his own lawn. I once mentioned to a neighbor that my daughter is getting old enough to use the mower, and she looked at me like I had horns and a tail. As if a *girl* could be expected to mow the lawn - the horror!