I am amazed at how many people who posted are happy.
Depends how you define wealthy. We’re not 7-figure net worth people. There was a couple decade gap for me in GA and it’s only been in the last four or so years I got active again. We’re partners in a well-equipped and well capitalized 172. The partnership has enough reserves to swap out our motor at TBO, refresh the necessary FWF stuff, and pay our fixed expenses for the next two years.…only wealthy people fly.
If he did, he hasn't told me about it yet.Does that mean you married a wealthy heiress?
If he did, he hasn't told me about it yet.
I’ll take the flip side: living in a country like this with the options we have and seeing where we are vs. where we’ve been, I’m amazed at how many UNhappy people there are who seem to have pretty good lives. Seems to me there are some (many?) people who aren’t happy unless they’re unhappy. This is a general observation - I’m not meaning to aim it at you or anyone else in particular.I am amazed at how many people who posted are happy.
To the point I find it unbelievable.
Or it reinforces only wealthy people fly.
I mean 20k would certainly change my life for the better,....
I am amazed at how many people who posted are happy.
To the point I find it unbelievable.
My observation is that there are two kinds of wealthy people. Those who buy $25,000 watches as impulse purchases and those who sneak their own snacks into movies because the prices at the theaters are too high!This is a trick question. I’m having a hard time coming up with a figure which would ever make me think snacks at a movie are not too expensive for me to want them.
Depends how you define wealthy.I am amazed at how many people who posted are happy.
To the point I find it unbelievable.
Or it reinforces only wealthy people fly.
Yes indeed....happiness is an inside job.I’ll take the flip side: living in a country like this with the options we have and seeing where we are vs. where we’ve been, I’m amazed at how many UNhappy people there are who seem to have pretty good lives. Seems to me there are some (many?) people who aren’t happy unless they’re unhappy. This is a general observation - I’m not meaning to aim it at you or anyone else in particular.
My life is by no means perfect and I have as many fears and regrets as the next person (probably more) but I just choose not to take anything given - especially “just” being alive - for granted.
It’s all a matter of perspective, I think.
But if you're not wealthy, how can you fly?
The other common way of looking at middle class is to divide people into thirds as:
Poor people: Those who don't have enough to survive. Who are constantly struggling. Who can't make ends meet, much less work less, go to school or save money to retire someday.
Middle class: Those who can pay their bills, but still have to have jobs to make ends meet.
Wealthy: Those who have the option to work or not as they desire.
I didn't know I had to be wealthy when I started, and now I'm hopelessly addicted and can't stop?
In meeting pilots one thing I've discovered is that there's a ton of people in this hobby who value experiences more than things.I am amazed at how many people who posted are happy.
To the point I find it unbelievable.
Or it reinforces only wealthy people fly.
In meeting pilots one thing I've discovered is that there's a ton of people in this hobby who value experiences more than things.
The threshold for being financially content will be a lot lower for those people. I wouldn't be surprised if some of that bias was evident on this board, too. Just speculation based on my own experiences.
This is a trick question. I’m having a hard time coming up with a figure which would ever make me think snacks at a movie are not too expensive for me to want them.
She is my hero.My MIL is one tough old lady. I had to learn the official language of the Philippine Islands so I could ask her if I could marry her daughter. (she didn't really say yes, she just said Ok)
Yup. Ask Warren Buffet!
A few weeks ago, SWMBO and I were at dinner with another couple. Like us, they're comfortably retired. Not rolling in wealth, but comfortable. But we started talking about how we still had the same habits as when we were younger and forced to be frugal. Like dinner that evening - we had clipped BOGO coupons out of the local shopper to buy our dinners. We still shop sales, use grocery coupons, don't buy expensive clothing, etc. The habits that put some money in the bank through the years are now permanent.
Put your current numbers in here. You'll be humbled (or you should be) ...
How Rich Am I?
Calculate how rich you are compared to the rest of the world. Are you in the top global income percentile? Does your household income make you wealthy?howrichami.givingwhatwecan.org
I took the question as if someone or somehow you were given/awarded money tomorrow. Of course I could earn 20k but the question wasn't how much would you have to earn to change your life.... For me 20k would pay off my car without dipping into my airplane savings so if I came across 20k tomorrow it would change my life.Then why not raise 20k? Are you already working two jobs? Putting in 80 hours/week? If not, getting a part-time gig or doing a little OT could net you 20k in a year or so easily.
Those behaviors are not mutually exclusive.My observation is that there are two kinds of wealthy people. Those who buy $25,000 watches as impulse purchases and those who sneak their own snacks into movies because the prices at the theaters are too high!
I took the question as if someone or somehow you were given/awarded money tomorrow. Of course I could earn 20k but the question wasn't how much would you have to earn to change your life.... For me 20k would pay off my car without dipping into my airplane savings so if I came across 20k tomorrow it would change my life.
Well I could save a million dollars by retirement but that wasn’t really the point.Yes, that was the intent of the question. The point I was trying to make was that you don't have to wait for some fairy godmother to bestow 20k on you. You can change your own life if that's all it will take.
I don't think that's it at all. Not positive, but pretty sure that there's not a great correlation between being wealthy and being happy.I am amazed at how many people who posted are happy.
To the point I find it unbelievable.
Or it reinforces only wealthy people fly.
That right there would be pretty life-changing.well, besides buying a different plane for every day of the week, but other than that, not a whole lot will change for me.
Exactly the point I was trying to make. The money that would be life-changing is whatever would allow the wife and I to not have to work and continue living our lives, but with funds for increased travel. Having more "stuff" isn't necessarily life-changing to me, as we already have more than what we need. Adding a vacation home or a Ferrari isn't going to change that. The question was what amount would be "life-changing", not "what all would you buy if you won 100 million".I guess I'm an accountant for a reason. You guys put a lot of emotional thought to this question. I'm practical to a fault. I picked a number where I could use a good amount of it for capex spending (turboprop) and the rest I could turn into my own annuity through investments that would fund the opex and not needing to work. I could the spend my days flying my turboprop around either doing LifeLine Pilots, Pilots N Paws or traveling with the fam. I don't need a different house or fancy cars. Just need the capital to make the job go away and do what I want....in faster style.
Remember that costs are higher in the US also. We (mostly) live in Mexico and it's a hell of a lot easier to live on $15k a year there than $15k a year in the US. As an example, we've been there for about 12 years and in all that time have never once lived a house with HVAC (and the bills associated with purchase, installation, maintenance and *energy costs* of having HVAC). Try doing that in Minnesota or Dallas.interesting to put actual numbers to it - but I already knew (qualitatively) that in the US, even the bottom of the middle class would be wealthier than most of the rest of the world.
What do you consider life changing money
All of it.
Genuinely curious whereabouts in Mexico one feels safe to live these days? Especially if there are safe areas where a modest amount goes a long way.Remember that costs are higher in the US also. We (mostly) live in Mexico and it's a hell of a lot easier to live on $15k a year there than $15k a year in the US. As an example, we've been there for about 12 years and in all that time have never once lived a house with HVAC (and the bills associated with purchase, installation, maintenance and *energy costs* of having HVAC). Try doing that in Minnesota or Dallas.
As someone mentioned earlier, it would be interesting to see something more like a quality of life or affordability chart showing which countries do the best in terms of the relationship between cost of living and median salary, or cost of living and 10th percentile salary. After all, it doesn't matter if you make $50K a year, making you rich by global standards, but that job has you living in a city where you need $55k a year to keep your head above water. You're still just as poor as the person making $7K a year in a city that costs $8K a year to get by and you're actually worse off than the person making $10k a year in a city that is affordable at $8K.