I got to thinking about life, money and people with this. Our yearly household is just north of six figures. We have a mortgage, two car payments, Camper payment and storage(less than 200 a month) and all the other phones/cable/inet junk bills everyone else does.
People with these stats have to live on budgets, right? You have to save for what you want or buy it on credit and pay someone interest to let you have your experience early.
Second, I have a friend whose a Anesthesiologist. Great dude, started with nothing. All loans through school, got the grades, got the job, paid them back. Dude has 3 kids and house 200K above mine, but same cars and other bills etc. But this fella is probably 1.5 to 2.5 times more in a paycheck than me. But, really his expenses aren't more than 50 percent more than me. He's making money each month because he's got a better ratio. That's translates into the ability to do the things I want to do at often double or better rate.
So, I've read a few more of your posts, and I think I understand where you're coming from.
Yes, people with all those bills and that income typically have to save for a vacation. And you're right about the expense ratio, too.
In 2004, DH and I were in a similar place financially. Our expense ratio was high and a 3K trip was a really big deal. In 2010, we had 45K of tuition expenses every year, income under 100K and enough savings that 3K of heat pump replacement in the same year we had to buy a new car wasn't a big deal.
What changed? Us. We cut our expenses. No cable TV. No land line. We used vonage back then, so it was $10/month for phone. We kept the internet, but cut our food, clothing and entertainment budgets in a massive way. We used an envelope system, and slowly decreased how much money we put in the envelopes.
I could get collard greens cheaply and by the bushel basket. We bought into a CSA. I've never seen so much cabbage and potatoes in my life. We bought beef by the side and ate a ton of collards, cabbage, potatoes and beef. A major splurge for us was a whole spring lamb at $4/lb packed weight. Then we ate lamb and greens and potatoes. We didn't buy alcohol. We didn't buy dairy products. We took packed lunches to work every day and never went out to eat or bought processed convenience foods.
Vacations were in-state, AND off-season. We're talking NC beaches in January, or going to stay with my in-laws in the mountains.
We sold things. If we'd owned a camper, we'd have sold it. And probably the vehicle that towed it if we could get something more fuel efficient. No storage - if it didn't fit in the house, it was gone. DH picked up some side jobs - he'd work 55-60 hour weeks and I'd stay home with the baby.
We weren't saving for anything in particular - we were just moving to a sustainable expense/income ratio. And we did it. But it wasn't easy, and required both of us to be committed, not just along for the ride.
We still do it. I just replaced a growing daily starbucks habit with some ultra-fancy tea leaves that I take to the office. Even with high-end tea, I'm going from $2-5/day to $.25/day. That's a minimum of $455/yr with one little change. And the tea makes me feel massively spoiled and indulged.
My point is just that it's doable. Over a relatively small number of years.