Happy with Less

May 22, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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When I wrote about the high material expectations of 20-somethings, I was intrigued by the comment from Jae Jimenez, a 26-year-old who lives in Brooklyn. He and his wife live in a two-bedroom apartment with their 10-month-old daughter Ava. Instead of wishing he could afford a big house for his family, he said that he's content, and grateful, for what he has.

I asked Jae, who works in sales, how he learned about money. He said that he has worked since he was 13, which helped teach him how to work hard and appreciate what he has. His parents, he says, "brought me up with the ideals to get the necessary tools to try and make a great life for my new family. And because my parents brought me up with the ideas of appreciation, charity, and giving to others, I don't feel like I have a 'spoiled brat' mind set and I don't feel like I'm owed anything."

He points out that it's easy to believe, from all the images in the media, that a newly-married couple should go out and buy a house the very next day, even if they can barely afford the mortgage. He cites HGTV's Property Virgins as an example of that mindset.

He says, "We want to save, and then skip the small fixer-upper starter house and go to the next level. We are really not in a rush and while Ava is only 10-months-old, she has no idea what's going on or where she lives. The important thing is that we are working towards that plateau in our lives and once we get there we want to feel 100 percent that it was right and we aren't selling plasma to pay for our mortgage. That's what's really important."

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perhaps it's the fact as a kid we moved almost every year or every other year when my dad was in the army, but the concept of a starter house is completely foreign to me...when my dad left the service we wanted a HOUSE. A house that was ours, and could be ours forever. A house we could put thumb tacks in the walls, and repaint into whatever color we wanted. While the house was not ours FOREVER, I am baffled by people who buy a house and then move in like 3 years...

Maybe it's part of being happy with what you have..but once I become a property owner, I am not going to care about how much nicer the other houses are or if they have more space or more yard, because the property will be MINE! Even if I could in theory afford a nicer house, why would I want to leave the house I bought unless I absolutely had to?

Veronica of NY 2:04PM May 22, 2009

in a declining market such as the last couple of years. Maybe a great idea for the next couple of years as houses still seem to be declining some.

Would NOT have been a great idea during the average of the last 40 years when houses went mostly up in value.

As for the "Property Virgins" show on HGTV, skip it. It's often silly.

Muser of NM 11:33AM May 22, 2009

Alpha Consumer

Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, writes about making smarter financial decisions. She’s the author of Generation Earn: The Young Professional's Guide to Spending, Investing, and Giving Back.

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