LuvOrlando
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2006
- Messages
- 21,783
It is a good point that comparing yourself to others in your area can make you feel a certain way. I mean, comparatively, we seem dirt poor. I see high end luxury cars driving around my city all day long. My neighborhood streets are lined with McLarens, Lamborghinis, Ferraris, Bentleys...all manner of luxury cars. It's insane. But maybe those people are leasing those cars and living massive debt ridden lives? Or maybe they just make really good money? Sure seems like a LOT of people around here have a LOT of money, when most houses sell for all cash in the $2M range. Certainly it's a well off area.
We drive 16 and 7 year old Hondas. We rent because we can't afford to buy here at current rates and haven't managed to scape together $250,000 for a down payment yet. We have NO consumer debt. Our kids play no sports. We have no gym membership. We eat at moderate priced restaurants when we go out. We have Disneyland Annual passes, and that is literally our only entertainment splurge. We haven't taken a major family vacation since 2018. But yet, we make over the upper middle-class threshold for our city. I suppose if we had been able to purchase a home 10 years ago when they were less than half the price they are now, we'd be in much better shape, and we would actually be able to feel like we are an upper class household, but right now? No way. It seems like homeownership is a joke for us. Like, it will NEVER be a possibility. Every time we get close, the prices jack way up or now we have the situation with the interest rates. It's perpetually out of reach for us, no matter how much more money we make or how much we save up. The irony is, if rates were still below 3%, we'd be able to FINALLY buy a house this year. But nope. It's discouraging, and makes you feel like there is no way up the ladder.
I remember reading somewhere that the whole notion of home ownership & middle class was part of some kind of giant national marketing campaign shortly after WW2. It included a new ideology about homes, cars and family. The reason I noticed it when I came across the info was because my Grandmother told me all about it, because she lived it. She was of the generation who made it through the hardships of the Depression and WW2 where everyone gave up so much and when they started to move forward this ideal state of things became a fixture in national consciousness as a driving force. Middle Class with a house, a car etc was presented as sort of a prize earned by dutiful behavior when called upon, so it's sort of a fictional thing that became entrenched as a model.
Lots of city people live entire lives without ever owning the roof over their heads so I don't get the preoccupation with ownership. Truthfully, very few people ever actually own their homes. What we do is go into a co-ownership with a bank. We all saw how kind they were as co-owners in 08, soooo it's a bit iffy.