design_mom
probably more like my dad than I care to admit
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2007
- Messages
- 6,192
okay--follow-up question!
I see a lot of mentions about how stressful it is to live month to month and worry about bills and that having more money would make that go away.
At what point do you think that is likely to go away?
I ask because in my own life, I have known many families (not all) who lived paycheck to paycheck, but as raises and promotions came, with-in a few months they had upgraded their standard of living (maybe buying a bigger house, or one in a nicer neighborhood, buying a car, signing the kids up for more expensive activities, enrolling the kids in private school, etc)., and are right back to living paycheck to paycheck.
It seems to me, that often, once you pass a certain, not all that high threshold, most people are either good at living within their means, end up pushing it to the edge, or overspend, regardless of what those means are.
I know a lot of people like that too (who spend what they've got.) I am not one of those people. I am a saver. Knowing I have a "cushion" gives me comfort. Many of our peers have bigger houses, nicer cars, better vacations... and I'm okay with that. When I got laid off last year and could honestly tell my kids "don't worry, it'll be okay... we've saved money just in case something like this happens" it was all worth it to me.
I would not be happy living paycheck-to-paycheck no matter what my income level was. I am confident we could scale back from where we are now and still be happy. However, I would need more than "meeting basic needs" -- and I don't mean to spend. I'd want it to save. Knowing we have a "rainy day fund" makes me feel secure.
I think I could scale back farther than my husband could (he likes "stuff" more than I do), so I'm sure there's a limit for everyone. For me, my limit would be higher than 'basic needs met' but not as high as we are living now.