Submariner wrote:
person wrote:$60k is a lot of money when you are 20 years old and single. You can live with roommates, buy crappy clothes from Express, and believe that you are a baller because you drink Greygoose, eat $20 AYCE KBBQ, and read GQ. Life is good. Your girlfriend (who is still in school) thinks you are baller, and you drive a Civic.
Then you turn 25. You get into a serious relationship and your priorities change. Now you want to live in your own apartment instead of dealing living with a bunch of smelly dudes. Now you want to drive a nice yuppy car like a used 3-series BMW or some entry-level Acura/Lexas. Now you want to get rid of your IKEA furniture and buy stuff that is a step above college-dorm quality. You invest in a couple nice things, like good leather shoes and maybe a jacket or a suit.
Then you turn 30. You want to do interesting things and have an interesting life. You pick up expensive hobbies like photography, traveling, etc and you become a foodie. Spending $100 dollars on dinner is not out of the question, and you'll need to pay for your date sometimes (not every time, because you aren't a tool, but you need to pay sometimes). You get a nice apartment downtown, go to mixers, and you start to dress nicely to impress ladies. You need to redo your wardrobe because suddenly, H&M won't cut it anymore. Instead, you start shopping at JCrew/Banana/etc. and occasionally splurge at Sak's or some boutique Japanese hipster store.
Then you get married. Now you need to worry about buying a house. You're going to need at least $100-200k in liquid funds for a down-payment. To save money, you move in together and begin to cut back on things like eating out.
Then you have a kid. Now you are screwed because you need to worry about and support a 3rd head. You trade in your car for a minivan. Do you want to pay for babysitters? Tutors? Game systems? Nice clothes? Or do you want to be a deadbeat parent and only give them crappy food and a roof to sleep under?
Time keeps passing. Suddenly, $200k is barely enough to pay the bills when you are 50 years old, living in a nice area, have decent taste, and have a family of 4 or more to support. Do you want to pay for your kids to go to college? That's expensive. Do you want to retire? That's expensive. Do you want to support your wife so she doesn't have to work and also take care of kids? That's expensive. Do you want to maintain your hobbies that you picked up in your yuppy days? That's expensive. Do you want to have a social life and go on vacations? That's expensive.
As you can see, money is important. Saying you want a job that "makes you happy" instead of earning big bucks is loser talk. That's another way of saying you give up and want to compromise to make yourself feel better. You can get paid well doing ANYTHING, you just need to be good at it. Stop making excuses and do something
OP here. Thanks for the long reply. I don't think you know depressing this sounds to me...
Was that your intention, or do I really have this to look forward to? God.
It is depressing. It's depressing because that guy (and many others) are choosing to value stupid (and expensive) shit. I say stupid because it is clear that he doesn't really value most of the stuff he described - he's paying for it because he thinks that's expected, or to be accepted and describes most of it in a negative context. That... is stupid.
Whether you have it to look forward to, is completely up to you & what you choose to value.