My parents are well off. My dad makes more in a year that I probably will make in 5 years. They were able to pay 100% of college for 3 kids, as well as grad school for me in full. They really, really value education. My dad has 3 degrees, as do I. In my family, there wasn't a question about if we would go to college, but rather where. They stressed the great value of a public university education, both having gone to Ohio State. All 3 of their kids ended up at Big 10 schools, not super surprising. This was the most important thing to them and now that I am expecting my first child, I can totally understand why. As I said before, I realize how much of a life changing gift it has been for me and I know my siblings would completely agree.
But even with all the money they had, they had a very down to earth attitude about life. We always went to public school. We didn't get the flashy clothes that many other students wore (we shopped at Old Navy not Abercrombie). We didn't get the gadgets and toys other kids got. We got a small allowance in exchange for beyond basic chores (making ours beds didn't count, but mowing the lawn earned extra). We did get cars, but they weren't new or flashy like so many of my classmates. We got hand-me-down cars, but they were safe and well maintained.
The only thing that was pretty unique from my classmates was that we traveled a lot. My parents really valued being exposed to other peoples and experiences. We usually vacationed 3 times a year and there were plenty of trips to WDW over the years, but a lot of the places we went really changed how I viewed the world. We traveled all over the US. We didn't take beach trips like other families, we took trips to battle fields, national parks and places of historic significance. My dad is a huge history buff and vacations for the most part were an opportunity for learning. Education was my parents #1 concern for their children and they viewed travel as part of that education.
And we traveled overseas to Europe, Central and South America and the Middle East. I was exposed to other cultures, other religions and living conditions that I had never really seen in the US. Extreme poverty like nothing in the US (even in the deep south). I saw young children and the very elderly engaged in hard manual labor, they were not enjoying life with their kids in old age. And I saw wealth like I had never seen either, especially in the Middle East. People flaunting material possessions like jewelry, clothing and super cars in a way you would never see in the Mid-West. It was such an amazing learning experience for me. And I hope to provide similar experiences for my children (though probably not to the same level that my parents were able to afford).
I am not sure where you lived as a child that you saw people traveling and living for the now, but I would be interested to know more about their country's safety net system. Lots of countries provide much more generous benefits to their citizens, such as 4 weeks standard paid time off, extended paid maternity leave, universal health care, living wage old age benefits, etc. The US is unlike most other 1st world countries in that we don't have such things. That makes it harder for someone in the US to say, "yes, I am going to live for today and not worry about the percentage I am putting towards my retirement." At 33, when making my retirement decisions, I am fully banking on the idea that social security won't exist when I retire. I plan on relying just on myself for my needs in old age because I don't think the government will be giving much assistance.
That doesn't mean that I am not happy or living for now. I just prioritize those things that I want to spend my money on, which for us is travel. DH and I are going on a Norwegian Fjords cruise in May. We took trips to WDW and
Disneyland last year. We took a 3 week road-trip honeymoon to 13 national parks in the Western US the year before. We went on a Central/South American cruise the year before that. And so on, going on at least one major trip each year. At some point, I would love to expand that to more but right now there are other competing interests that also need to be funded. Travel makes us happy and so we prioritize for those expenses, giving up other things that don't contribute so much to that. My brother buys expensive clothes, eats out a ton and drives an Audi, but he never travels. We all make choices.
My basic point in this post is that I would like to take my parent's approach for my own children. They didn't give us everything in life, even though they could have. They focused on making us value the things that we had and they made us work for much of that. But in the end, they valued education so highly that they felt it was imperative to pay the full cost for us. It was the one thing that they knew would have the single greatest impact on our future and set us up for a good life, though the final outcome was ultimately in our own hands. That is what I want for my kids.