Anonymous wrote:Boob job with implants. I've worked in plastic surgery adjacent field and absolutely not, no.
Anonymous wrote:a Hinckley
It's dumb now but I will 100% buy once I retire
Anonymous wrote:Retire early - even though we could easily do it now, I have a highly paid flexible job that is enjoyable. It astounds me how driven people are here to never work again, even at the expense of spending money on their children. I am also surprised at how much people dislike their jobs (but that is another topic)
Holiday home - I am opposed given housing shortages but also like to holiday in lots of different places
Plastic surgery - I always thought at some stage I would get a facelift or something similar but have been put off recently by so many celebrities looking weird after major work.
I do spend on nice cars, did put my children through private school, buy designer clothes/bags, go to nice restaurants, great holidays
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A new car.
I’ve never bought a new car. I always think that I would like one but I don’t do it.
I’m 60 and have never bought a new car either. I just don’t care about cars enough to even want a new one.
NP- Have never bought a new car, but I like nice cars. I have a Mercedes but paid 25k for it used. I treat it very well and plan to drive it forever, as I did with the previous one.
We buy new cars, but we drive them for 8-10+ years. Last one cost me $50K, sold it 13 years later for $14K. Paid $30K for another car, sold it 11 years later for 11K.
We like having new, so we don't have someone else problem (like many used cars do). And it works well if you keep cars for a long time. Financially we come out the same as someone who buys used cars---and we don't do repairs ourselves and need reliable cars for getting to jobs.
Sucker. Your hunk of metal depreciates a ton immediately after driving it off the lot. 8-10 years is also not very long to keep a car.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't buy expensive sunglasses. They get lost or broken way too easily, especially with small kids.
I never understood this craze either. But my prescription sunglasses are pricey and I can’t do anything about that.
Once you try Maui Jims (including prescriptions) you won't go back to anything else. They are such high quality lenses and last forever (but I don't typically break mine or loose them, I'm used to having prescriptions so any sunglasses are too valuable to "loose")
It's lose, you know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a single family house they're so overpriced a run down right now inventory sucks.
great for you - you're clearly the smartest in the room, whereas some of us need an actual place to live
Anonymous wrote:Private schools and beach houses. Neither is anywhere near worth the money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a single family house they're so overpriced a run down right now inventory sucks.
great for you - you're clearly the smartest in the room, whereas some of us need an actual place to live
You're reply doesn't make any sense unless your homeless living in a box. I do have a place to live its a rental apartment.
What a stupid A-- response.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a single family house they're so overpriced a run down right now inventory sucks.
great for you - you're clearly the smartest in the room, whereas some of us need an actual place to live
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A new car.
I’ve never bought a new car. I always think that I would like one but I don’t do it.
I’m 60 and have never bought a new car either. I just don’t care about cars enough to even want a new one.
NP- Have never bought a new car, but I like nice cars. I have a Mercedes but paid 25k for it used. I treat it very well and plan to drive it forever, as I did with the previous one.
We buy new cars, but we drive them for 8-10+ years. Last one cost me $50K, sold it 13 years later for $14K. Paid $30K for another car, sold it 11 years later for 11K.
We like having new, so we don't have someone else problem (like many used cars do). And it works well if you keep cars for a long time. Financially we come out the same as someone who buys used cars---and we don't do repairs ourselves and need reliable cars for getting to jobs.
Anonymous wrote:a single family house they're so overpriced a run down right now inventory sucks.