
If you live in New York City and make $100K a year, you are considered poor. If you are a family of three or four and make $300K/year, you will once more find it challenging to live in The Big Apple!
Start Spreading the News… It’s Expensive Here!
I don’t know how some of these folks do it, but evidently it is becoming more and more difficult for “middle class” people to remain in the city that never sleeps.
The middle class is leaving the city, and the millionaires are coming in – they are the only ones who can afford the expensive lifestyle.
I have visited NYC many times (not recently), and although it is an exciting place to see and do things, I couldn’t imagine living there.
Check out the incredible video below:
Can you spot the Old World buildings?
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Thanks for sharing, Lisa! 🙂
John
I agree with staying in the wide open spaces. There are places I would like to go. But New York is not one of them. Despite the entertainment of it all. Heck, I don’t even like going into Milwaukee City in Wisconsin where I live. Even though it is fairly close.
The more nature that is surrounding me the better. Which is why I choose to walk along side the river everyday that runs through my town, and through one our parks. And I have been doing so even in the cold wintery weather we have had. We had 18 inches of snow last week, followed by the bitter cold. So, I’ve been walking in weather around 10 degrees. But I still find it more enjoyable than going to Planet Fitness, which is always very busy.
Although I am happy to say that the temperature will get into the 30’s this week. A heat wave! 🤣
Lisa
I appreciate your feedback, Roark! My wife and I also like quiet and moved from expensive and overcrowded New Jersey in the 90s to South Carolina. It was one of the best things that we ever decided to do. 🙂
John
Hi John, et al,
This sounds so familiar. We moved when housing costs were increasing practically every day in 2004, and again in 2010. It just wasn’t sustainable but the Realtors and city treasurers loved it.
Kenneth you are in good company. I like quiet. It seemed like everywhere we lived, the area has been too congested. In certain parts of Vancouver BC, for example, there were towers everywhere. We rented in a surrounding area where houses that had cost $9,000 in the 50’s were now going for over a million dollars.
Some foreign owners were leaving homes vacant for 6 months or longer instead of bothering to rent them out. Too much hassle. The province’s premiere finally legislated for a 15% surcharge on house sale transactions, but it was too little, too late.
San Francisco and New York were crazier we heard. And try working at say, Starbucks for $15, and managing to get along. While some folks are flipping houses left and right!
Hope you enjoy your day even so!
Blessings,
Roark
Thanks for sharing, Kenneth! 👍🙂
John
But I don’t want to “be a part of it” either, even just to visit. I am not a people person. Too many things can and will go wrong when so many people get together crammed in just a couple (or three) miles.
Escape… escape (now) from New York. Like California, it is too costly to live there pushing people out to claim seacoast cities for “other” purposes.
As usual — that’s my opinion, and we each have our own.
I just like wide open spaces.
Kenneth