Awesome. And trust me the other night I had dinner at a friends and they mentioned they had opened and served a $90 bottle of pinot noir and I couldn't tell the difference with the cheaper $40 bottle the other couple brought. But my palate isn't so refined. I personally just buy the cheap stuff and don't drink that much. The same couple had a $7500 tab for their wedding table drinks alone from just the champagne. They have very expensive tastes and can afford it though.
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Struggling with new life and not keeping up w/ Joneses
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View PostAwesome. And trust me the other night I had dinner at a friends and they mentioned they had opened and served a $90 bottle of pinot noir and I couldn't tell the difference with the cheaper $40 bottle the other couple brought. But my palate isn't so refined. I personally just buy the cheap stuff and don't drink that much. The same couple had a $7500 tab for their wedding table drinks alone from just the champagne. They have very expensive tastes and can afford it though.
I see designer bags that cost hundreds for no good reason..all made in China like the discounted stuff from Ross. 20k purses not even made of exotic leather...7k dresses that's made out of poly/cotton blend...and can't be washed. It almost makes people seem like sheeps wanting these expensive items because some celebrity wears it.
I am okay with expensive houses/cars tho. At least you feel and see the quality going into them. A 70k Maserati is on a whole new level of engineering vs a 70k purse, or a pen costing 10k.Last edited by Singuy; 07-18-2016, 09:04 AM.
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Originally posted by Singuy View PostThere have been studies using wine judges and blind testing expensive vs cheap bottles of wine. The conclusion was that even the wine judges didn't know what they were doing. The same judge would score the same exact bottle of wine the highest score, and the lowest score. There's a lot of BS in the world, it's your job to sort them out and not fall for the trap.
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You know what I dont get is the whole cost of living thing. I understand the premise but its ridiculous that the same exact job with the same exact responsibilities pays twice is much in one area than another. Sure housing, and to some extent taxes, are more expensive in these areas but everything else is the same damn price everyone else pays.
You will also notice that people in these particular cities drive nicer cars, have more recreational toys, shop at whole foods, and sometimes even work bankers hours, or less. I work 50+ hour weeks as a Database Admin and make half what I would in places like DC, NY, and SF...
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Originally posted by Spiffster View PostSure housing, and to some extent taxes, are more expensive in these areas but everything else is the same damn price everyone else pays.
Also...food isnt the same price. I was just in nyc and a burrito at chipotle was $2 more than what I pay in maryland. $2 isnt a big deal but if everything costs a little more it will add up significantly over a years time.
But just housing alone is enough to price most people out of the market unless their employer pays them significantly more than a place in east bumble.
I mean...why doesnt all developers/admins move to san fran and make $150k/year. Because even with that salary they struggle to get by.
Most people from smaller areas dont understand this concept. They dont understand how expensive housing is because unless you see it/experience it first hand...it doesnt register.Last edited by rennigade; 07-19-2016, 08:25 AM.
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Originally posted by rennigade View PostAnd thats why jobs pay a lot more. A large house in PA where my parents live costs around $300k. 2 months ago a house very similar in size sold where I live in maryland (near wash dc) for $850k. Almost 3x as much. I pay 3x as much in rent where I live vs PA.
Also...food isnt the same price. I was just in nyc and a burrito at chipotle was $2 more than what I pay in maryland. $2 isnt a big deal but if everything costs a little more it will add up significantly over a years time.
But just housing alone is enough to price most people out of the market unless their employer pays them significantly more than a place in east bumble.
I mean...why doesnt all developers/admins move to san fran and make $150k/year. Because even with that salary they struggle to get by.
Most people from smaller areas dont understand this concept. They dont understand how expensive housing is because unless you see it/experience it first hand...it doesnt register.
BTW, housing is plenty expensive here in Denver.
Sure I could move to one of these areas, but I like Denver too much. I would rather just stay here and complain about how people in other cities make more than I do ;-)Last edited by Spiffster; 07-19-2016, 08:40 AM.
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I actually argued that HCOLA are not paying enough! Making 150k/year is pretty much nothing if a typical crappy 70 year old house cost 900k...on the contrary, you can buy a brand new bigger house in a LCOLA for 250k, making 90k/year.
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Originally posted by Spiffster View Post
Sure I could move to one of these areas, but I like Denver too much. I would rather just stay here and complain about how people in other cities make more than I do ;-)
In terms of bang for your buck and quality of life...Denver may be #1 spot imo. Not a terrible amount of people...you can drive 1 hour in any direction and basically be in the mountains. Skiing is top notch and hunting is really good out there. Cant wait to visit again in Feb.
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Originally posted by Spiffster View PostYou know what I dont get is the whole cost of living thing. I understand the premise but its ridiculous that the same exact job with the same exact responsibilities pays twice is much in one area than another. Sure housing, and to some extent taxes, are more expensive in these areas but everything else is the same damn price everyone else pays.
You will also notice that people in these particular cities drive nicer cars, have more recreational toys, shop at whole foods, and sometimes even work bankers hours, or less.
I personally didn't take a pay cut when I moved to a city with 70% cheaper housing. I have white collar friends in SF who make less money than I do.
The high cost of housing drives up the cost of everything.
Quality of life is substantially better in our lower cost region. But that's why we moved.
(In truth we moved from *the* most expensive city to a more mid-cost area. So maybe it's that middle area that is more ideal. But given our perspective, it's just dirt cheap to us).
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Originally posted by Singuy View PostI actually argued that HCOLA are not paying enough! Making 150k/year is pretty much nothing if a typical crappy 70 year old house cost 900k...on the contrary, you can buy a brand new bigger house in a LCOLA for 250k, making 90k/year.
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