viewing ownly Posted Saturday at 02:35 PM Posted Saturday at 02:35 PM On 1/26/2026 at 10:57 PM, Lotus-eater said: That woman is living beyond her means. She makes only $2K a month and yet rents a 2 bedroom apartment. She could get a roommate and cut her housing expense in half. Even worse, she cries because she has to work 40 hours per week: "working makes me soooooooooo exhausted" that she can only rouse herself to do other housework/errands on weekends, which leaves her with no free time. Talk about the stereotypical snowflake Gen Zoomer. You're not a snowflake just because you have high rent and are bothered by it. That's a landlord issue, not a problem she created. Nobody should feel forced to get a roommate. That's when you start to have REAL problems. Lower paying jobs are exhausting by design. It's called moving up the ladder to work less.
+ Vegas_Millennial Posted Saturday at 07:26 PM Posted Saturday at 07:26 PM 4 hours ago, viewing ownly said: That's a landlord issue, not a problem she created Minimum wage, single income, 2 bedrooms? I'm sorry... The 2nd bedroom is a choice she made and is prioritizing over her future. A studio is fine for 1 person. I laugh at sob stories that report the minimum wage is not enough to rent an average 2 bedroom apartment in most cities... why are all these one people on minimum wage needing 2 bedroom apartments! Lotus-eater 1
+ Vegas_Millennial Posted Saturday at 07:38 PM Posted Saturday at 07:38 PM (edited) On 12/6/2025 at 6:53 PM, BeamerBikes said: I’m supposed to be comfortable I suppose but it’s mainly locked up in a 401k prison. Then in home equity as well…. I gotta get busy living. I’d rather die while I’m living than live while I’m dying. Well said. I'm comfortable/wealthy as well; but, like you, it's locked away in retirement accounts and home equity. I've lived a life of saving and investing most of my earned income in my 20s. Now in Middle Age, what I save and invest is peanuts compared to the growth from the smart decisions I made in my 20s. To get busy living, I've stopped saving as much and increased my leisure spending; but, it's hard switching from a savings mindset to a spending mindset. Edited Saturday at 07:51 PM by Vegas_Millennial + mds1 1
Lotus-eater Posted Saturday at 07:51 PM Posted Saturday at 07:51 PM (edited) 5 hours ago, viewing ownly said: You're not a snowflake just because you have high rent and are bothered by it. That's a landlord issue, not a problem she created. Nobody should feel forced to get a roommate. That's when you start to have REAL problems. Lower paying jobs are exhausting by design. It's called moving up the ladder to work less. It's not the landlord's responsibility to provide her with a 2 bedroom apartment that she can afford. Too bad if the entitled snowflake needs to get a roommate or to move to a small studio. Lower paying jobs are not designed to be exhausting; plenty of high paying jobs are also exhausting. If she wants a higher standard of living, she needs to work toward a better paying job or move to a more affordable location, which people do all of the time. Edited Saturday at 07:53 PM by Lotus-eater + Vegas_Millennial 1
viewing ownly Posted Saturday at 08:46 PM Posted Saturday at 08:46 PM 1 hour ago, Vegas_Millennial said: Minimum wage, single income, 2 bedrooms? I'm sorry... The 2nd bedroom is a choice she made and is prioritizing over her future. A studio is fine for 1 person. I laugh at sob stories that report the minimum wage is not enough to rent an average 2 bedroom apartment in most cities... why are all these one people on minimum wage needing 2 bedroom apartments! Typically, to hoard. That's standard, and the answer. Took me two solid weeks with generous helpers to throw out mountains of shit when one of my single parents passed, always insisting on living alone with extra rooms to store things not needed or being looked at - until I had to. I may have chucked SOMETHING that may have had value (like basketball standout Kareem Abdul-Jabbar singing her yearbook before that became his name), but when too much is kept, it's sad. + Vegas_Millennial 1
Rudynate Posted Sunday at 01:51 AM Posted Sunday at 01:51 AM On 12/6/2025 at 4:07 PM, Vegas_Millennial said: I read somewhere (Financial Samurai) that wealthy people should not have more than 40% of their net worth tied up in their house. So, with $2 Million net worth, someone's house should not exceed $800K. I've looked, and I can't buy a $800K one bedroom in Manhattan and feel wealthy. I'm looking at moving to Ft Lauderdale in 2 years, and even $800K there doesn't buy anything that would scream "wealthy". Is it more important to look wealthy or be wealthy? + Vegas_Millennial 1
Luv2play Posted Sunday at 02:06 AM Posted Sunday at 02:06 AM The first 25 years of my life I was supported by my parents and got educated. The next 25 years I supported myself and built my wealth. The last 27 years I have been retired and led a comfortable life without having to work. Worked for me. But I was lucky to live in a time when costs of living were reasonable and one could save. Houses were relatively affordable and other things like cars were relatively cheap. I always had 2 which was a bit of an indulgence. And travel was easy and relatively hassle free. I feel sorry for the younger generation. They don’t have it as easy. ajvanguard and BSR 2
arnie Posted Sunday at 08:42 AM Posted Sunday at 08:42 AM Actually I am worth total almost 3M, but I don't consider myself wealthy but we judge our wealth in some respect to our peers. And that is considering that my social security meets all of my monthly nut and some additional expenditures. I am very cognizant that I need to maintain my nest egg and need to live to do that. I do watch how I spend my money. I come from a family that never had financial issues but was taught to be mindful about money. I live at a middle of the road level. I fly upgraded coach. I stay at Hampton Inn level hotels. I will eat at Outback but prefer a slightly better restaurant although I don't eat out often as I am definitely not a foodie. Living in Las Vegas I do shun the places on the Strip. I buy mid level cars, the last a Hyundai Tuscon, new, but keep them for 5 plus years. I rarely shop Macy's. more like Kohl's on sale or the outlet mall. I do live in an upscale community so by comparison to those who eat out constantly and take several expensive vacations a year, and also have vacation homes or have 500K bus size RV I don't feel wealthy. But I am also aware of how very fortunate I am, rating in probably the top 10% of the country so I shed no tears and ask for no sympathy. But I am can't buy 3000K pants from Neiman Marcus or spend 1000K for a night at the Four Seasons, that is wealthy. + FrankR, handiacefailure, + Vegas_Millennial and 1 other 4
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