
Pretty amazing as this is with no treats apart from a weekend in London with free accommodation. How about you guys?
Moderator: Global Moderator
I chuckled when I saw "wife" included as an expense on your list.jabba wrote: Just had a fight with the wife about our spending![]()
That is what I thought too but having a daughter in high school gives me a different perspective. Here in CT there are fees for sports. There are also fees for AP classes (if you want to actually take the test and get credit for it). We do not have activities busses so getting an "involved" kid home from school 100 or so days in the course of the year really adds up. And on it goes.MangoMan wrote: In the US, the cost of public school is generally paid for from property taxes [at least here in Illinois], so unless one sends their children to private school, that would not be an additional expense. Gas [petrol] is also way cheaper in the US than in Europe. Not sure how taxes, utilities and insurance compare. Maybe the 'wife' expense is reducible?
barrett wrote: Pointedstick and Tyler have this stuff figured out. We bow down to their collective awesomeness when it comes to living way below their means and, from all indications, being quite happy as well.
In other words, they're spoiled. They derive pleasure from things not experiences. That is something you need to change to reduce expenses and expectations. But in physical terms, your largest expense is the neighborhood and house you live in because it starts in motion the Hedonistic Envy Treadmill. I suspect your daughter -- depending on how old she is already -- is going to have very high standards about men (based on you) and likely be unhappy the rest of her life if you don't knock her expectations down a couple of pegs through tough love.barrett wrote: My wife and daughter both derive great pleasure from having nice things. I do not but we are a team so that drives costs up. Our food costs are really high. We are at at least $5000 a month in total expenses but I am a bit afraid to tally it all up.
I can't resist.TennPaGa wrote: Here are (most of) the regular expenses for me, the missus, and the 5 y/o:
Groceries 1200
Mortgage 600 (principal + interest)
Insurance 320 (100 autos, 70 life, 50 homeowners, 50 home warranty, 50 PMI)
Utilities 320 (150 electricity, 80 phone + internet, 70 water, 20 cell)
Cars 300 (200 for gas, 100 for other stuff averaged out)
Dog 300 (dog is ill)
Household 300
Dining out 200
Medical 200
Charity 120
Gifts 100 (Christmas, b'day, etc.)
-------------------
TOTAL 3960
Wow, thats very high. Whats up with that?TennPaGa wrote: Here are (most of) the regular expenses for me, the missus, and the 5 y/o:
Groceries 1200
Well, I wasn't really looking for advice, just contributing to the conversation because my numbers are probably in line with the OP's. I mostly derive pleasure from good experiences and they derive pleasure from both nice things and good experiences. I can't claim to be superior. I am just wired this way. My wife works hard and wants to look like a million bucks while she is still relatively young ("Who cares what I look like when I am 80?"). She grew up poor in China and started working (hard!) when she was seven years old. She buys most of the groceries, pays any bill she can get her hands on before I can, keeps the house immaculately clean, prepares delicious dinners, makes me laugh, picks me up when I am down and is an amazing mom to our daughter. The nice stuff she buys is almost always at a steep discount. Overall I think I got a pretty good deal.MachineGhost wrote:In other words, they're spoiled. They derive pleasure from things not experiences. That is something you need to change to reduce expenses and expectations. But in physical terms, your largest expense is the neighborhood and house you live in because it starts in motion the Hedonistic Envy Treadmill. I suspect your daughter -- depending on how old she is already -- is going to have very high standards about men (based on you) and likely be unhappy the rest of her life if you don't knock her expectations down a couple of pegs through tough love.barrett wrote: My wife and daughter both derive great pleasure from having nice things. I do not but we are a team so that drives costs up. Our food costs are really high. We are at at least $5000 a month in total expenses but I am a bit afraid to tally it all up.
Wait, American liberals keep telling me that the UK has free healthcare! I'VE BEEN SO MISLEDjabba wrote: Socials 359
[...]
Socials means the tax I pay each month to the government for healthcare etc.
Sounds like you have an amazing wife and daughter and you recognize it. Kudos to you all.barrett wrote:Well, I wasn't really looking for advice, just contributing to the conversation because my numbers are probably in line with the OP's. I mostly derive pleasure from good experiences and they derive pleasure from both nice things and good experiences. I can't claim to be superior. I am just wired this way. My wife works hard and wants to look like a million bucks while she is still relatively young ("Who cares what I look like when I am 80?"). She grew up poor in China and started working (hard!) when she was seven years old. She buys most of the groceries, pays any bill she can get her hands on before I can, keeps the house immaculately clean, prepares delicious dinners, makes me laugh, picks me up when I am down and is an amazing mom to our daughter. The nice stuff she buys is almost always at a steep discount. Overall I think I got a pretty good deal.MachineGhost wrote:In other words, they're spoiled. They derive pleasure from things not experiences. That is something you need to change to reduce expenses and expectations. But in physical terms, your largest expense is the neighborhood and house you live in because it starts in motion the Hedonistic Envy Treadmill. I suspect your daughter -- depending on how old she is already -- is going to have very high standards about men (based on you) and likely be unhappy the rest of her life if you don't knock her expectations down a couple of pegs through tough love.barrett wrote: My wife and daughter both derive great pleasure from having nice things. I do not but we are a team so that drives costs up. Our food costs are really high. We are at at least $5000 a month in total expenses but I am a bit afraid to tally it all up.
I'll also mention something that I think doesn't get discussed in these budget discussions. While our 17-year-old daughter is just a good kid all around and a very hard worker in school, she also is really well dressed most of the time and that does, in my opinion, give her some advantages here and there that really start to add up over time. If I am honest with myself I have to admit that I am learning something from my wife and daughter about how the world works. I love NOT spending money but sometimes there is more than one path.
jabba, your list looks about right to me for five people. $800 for groceries is certainly not high for three kids and two adults. The 'Wife" category looks high but eliminating her is messy.![]()
I've lost one and I keep one (or she keeps me). I'm still not sure which is more expensive (losing or keeping), but honestly, I can't imagine living without one for too long. I'd keep both if I could.barrett wrote: jabba, ...The 'Wife" category looks high but eliminating her is messy.![]()
Only partly, UK healthcare is free at the point of treatment. jabba is spending euros so he isn't in the UK.Pointedstick wrote:Wait, American liberals keep telling me that the UK has free healthcare! I'VE BEEN SO MISLEDjabba wrote: Socials 359
[...]
Socials means the tax I pay each month to the government for healthcare etc.![]()
Wow - that's an amazingly Alpha move. Impressive.barrett wrote: Also, we started to get lazy about really finishing off the leftovers and were wasting a considerable amount of food each month. I asked my wife if it could be as much as 20% and she said yes. So I took two $100 bills out of my wallet and threw them in the garbage. That elicited an excited "What the hell?" response from both her and our daughter. Point made and we now - just in the last couple of weeks - are eating everything! I was damn proud of that move and luckily I had a couple of Benjamins handy.
Whoops, I confused your post with the OPs! But this sounds like the right kind of psychological situation arising from hard work rather than a "trust fund" situation. The key difference here is likely that your wife is Asian rather than white. They know the value of hard work, so I don't think anyone minds them showing off conspicious consumption (except maybe their lazy counterparts).barrett wrote: Well, I wasn't really looking for advice, just contributing to the conversation because my numbers are probably in line with the OP's. I mostly derive pleasure from good experiences and they derive pleasure from both nice things and good experiences. I can't claim to be superior. I am just wired this way. My wife works hard and wants to look like a million bucks while she is still relatively young ("Who cares what I look like when I am 80?"). She grew up poor in China and started working (hard!) when she was seven years old. She buys most of the groceries, pays any bill she can get her hands on before I can, keeps the house immaculately clean, prepares delicious dinners, makes me laugh, picks me up when I am down and is an amazing mom to our daughter. The nice stuff she buys is almost always at a steep discount. Overall I think I got a pretty good deal.
I LOVE that story...good for you! Nothing like a good straightforward way to get the point across.barrett wrote: Also, we started to get lazy about really finishing off the leftovers and were wasting a considerable amount of food each month. I asked my wife if it could be as much as 20% and she said yes. So I took two $100 bills out of my wallet and threw them in the garbage. That elicited an excited "What the hell?" response from both her and our daughter. Point made and we now - just in the last couple of weeks - are eating everything! I was damn proud of that move and luckily I had a couple of Benjamins handy.
This is so true! Merchants love it for precisely the same reason: those expenses are easy to forget, and each one is usually not big enough to make you care too much about it. But once you've got a few, they really add up.WiseOne wrote: Also as far as getting monthly expenses under control... the secret for me was one I hit on a long time ago: monthly charges for this and that are far more deadly than the occasional dinner out or luxury purchase. I went through and got rid of all the monthly payments for stuff I didn't really need, in the process discovering one or two I wasn't even aware of (!). Cable TV, magazine subscriptions, identity protection services, etc etc. Amazing how it adds up.