Anonymous wrote:Ha. I’m Mormon and I can tell you how we do it.
1. Start having your kids as an undergraduate so you can use Medicaid to cover it (I did not do this but it is done often).
2. Get family to help with babysitting or pay a teenager to do it.
3. Family vacations are to national parks or relatives in another state.
4. Public school or homeschool and cheap extracurriculars
5. Put two kids in a room, three if you’re in NYC.
6. Budget budget budget. Lots of coupons and very little eating out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they have money. Next question.
Where do they get this money from? I make $300k. I struggled in my 30s. I received nothing from my parents. Do these people’s parents just give them money?
You would be shocked, OP. I know people who try to claim financial aid - meanwhile, their parents are funneling them money to keep up with the Joneses, and buy the "latest and greatest" vehicle, whatever. It's such BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 kids is nothing....
My mother’s neighbor were up to five or six when they hit 40 and now have ten total. Wife is a SAHM and husband is an engineer so probably makes no more than$300k
Here’s how they do it:
1. No $ towards college for any of them.
2. Hand me downs.
3. Not sure that the kids do a ton of outside activities besides church stuff
4. Went to some private Christian school on financial aid
5. Live in Howard county instead of someplace closer in.
I wouldn’t say that there kids seem happy per se but they definitely are well adjusted and kind. Certainly not my vision of raising kids but seems to work for them. I will say though there is no way this would have worked if any of their children had any sort of SN.
If they are making $300K, even $200K there is no excuse not to save even for community college or two years.
What an asinine thing to say. You have no idea what expenses they have.
No, its not. They get handy downs, they don't do activities outside of church and at private school. They can afford it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We make $700k a year with two big jobs. I’m pregnant with our third (at 35) and it’s gonna be a stretch.
Do these kids wear Chanel and Gucci?
Those night nannies and vacation homes really add up. It's so hard to get ahead these days.
Anonymous wrote:Ha. I’m Mormon and I can tell you how we do it.
1. Start having your kids as an undergraduate so you can use Medicaid to cover it (I did not do this but it is done often).
2. Get family to help with babysitting or pay a teenager to do it.
3. Family vacations are to national parks or relatives in another state.
4. Public school or homeschool and cheap extracurriculars
5. Put two kids in a room, three if you’re in NYC.
6. Budget budget budget. Lots of coupons and very little eating out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they have money. Next question.
Where do they get this money from? I make $300k. I struggled in my 30s. I received nothing from my parents. Do these people’s parents just give them money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they have money. Next question.
Where do they get this money from? I make $300k. I struggled in my 30s. I received nothing from my parents. Do these people’s parents just give them money?
I did not have any student loans - my college was paid for by Pell grant and TAP (NY state grant). I started working right after I graduated from college and did not have that aimlessly drifting around barista period. I did not struggle in my 30s either. By the time I was 30, I was married, had two kids and a house. The down payment for the house came from the condo I bought at 24.