disneysteve
DIS meet junkie
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2002
- Messages
- 16,200
Wow. So many replies while we were out spending money - LOL! Seriously, we went to an outlet center near our house and picked up some bargains on clearance and a produce market where prices are about 40% less than the supermarket where we stocked up on fruits and veggies for the week.
Mrs. Pete - Other than the fact that my folks only had 2 kids, you described my late 60's, early 70's childhood as well. Funny how similar they all were.
DisFlan - I agree that everything is relative. I'm also in the "top 5th income percentile" but you'd never know it by looking at how we live. Compare us to my peers making similar incomes and you'd think we were the disadvantaged ones. We've chosen to live at this level and put our money into savings and charitable giving just like you guys. By the way, the median income in the town where I work (not the town where we live) is $23,421, so I see those struggles too.
crisi- I grew up with a similar situation. My dad was a self-employed accountant. No employer-provided health insurance. No pension plan. He paid it all and had to make his own way for retirement. He died in '92 but left my mom in good shape. She has not had to go to work and has been able to continue a comfortable but thrifty lifestyle.
HaleyB - I think we are on the same page with everything.
imsayin - I had to laugh when I read your post about turning down the phone upgrade. We've done the same thing many times. When we were finally forced to upgrade our phones last year for technical reasons, my only question of the clerk was, "Which phones are free with our service?" We had 2 or 3 to pick from and chose from those. We never even considered anything that we'd have to pay for. So we don't have a camera or Internet access or MP3 players. But we can make and receive calls just fine.
Do you know that worldwide people spent $4 BILLION just on downloadable ringtones last year? Talk about a disturbing statistic. Imagine what good work that $4 billion could have done elsewhere.
Mrs. Pete - Other than the fact that my folks only had 2 kids, you described my late 60's, early 70's childhood as well. Funny how similar they all were.
DisFlan - I agree that everything is relative. I'm also in the "top 5th income percentile" but you'd never know it by looking at how we live. Compare us to my peers making similar incomes and you'd think we were the disadvantaged ones. We've chosen to live at this level and put our money into savings and charitable giving just like you guys. By the way, the median income in the town where I work (not the town where we live) is $23,421, so I see those struggles too.
crisi- I grew up with a similar situation. My dad was a self-employed accountant. No employer-provided health insurance. No pension plan. He paid it all and had to make his own way for retirement. He died in '92 but left my mom in good shape. She has not had to go to work and has been able to continue a comfortable but thrifty lifestyle.
HaleyB - I think we are on the same page with everything.
imsayin - I had to laugh when I read your post about turning down the phone upgrade. We've done the same thing many times. When we were finally forced to upgrade our phones last year for technical reasons, my only question of the clerk was, "Which phones are free with our service?" We had 2 or 3 to pick from and chose from those. We never even considered anything that we'd have to pay for. So we don't have a camera or Internet access or MP3 players. But we can make and receive calls just fine.
Do you know that worldwide people spent $4 BILLION just on downloadable ringtones last year? Talk about a disturbing statistic. Imagine what good work that $4 billion could have done elsewhere.
I think I'll stick to calling people for a chat.
