Seems irrelevant to the thread but I respect the flex.Our house is pretty basic. Our vehicle is pretty basic. My wife and I are both pretty low maintenance and she is pretty tight, so it works well for us.

Seems irrelevant to the thread but I respect the flex.Our house is pretty basic. Our vehicle is pretty basic. My wife and I are both pretty low maintenance and she is pretty tight, so it works well for us.
I shouldn’t have laughed at that.Seems irrelevant to the thread but I respect the flex.
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Getting a new phone/device every 1-2 years. I'm on about a 4-5 yr cycle with new phones. Mainly it's when the batteries tend to die.
Sporting event tickets (I know, I'm a horrible fan). I look at the amount of money people are dropping on season tickets, donations, merch, tailgating rigs, and am just amazed.
Fancy "Man Caves" or such. It's great that you've got a dedicated space that's got a 12' custom bar and a poler table, and massive big screen, etc for you to sit in by yourself 99% of the time, or for you buddies to come over maybe once a month.
Busted, @Angie !Remind me, again, why you and our daughter are going to Oregon this summer?
I was under the impression that it was to see the Yeah, Yeah, Yeahs, but I guess I must be mistaken...
I'm flying to Atlanta in July, I paid an extra $49 each way for an aisle seat in the exit row. At 6'2" it's well worth it.Upgrading seats on flights. I just don’t see how it is worth spending at least $800 more than normal seats. The difference is marginal and not worth the cost.
This. I'm 6'5" and could use the extra legroom, but I know I'll still be uncomfortable with a few extra inches and I'd rather put the money towards more drinks wherever I'm flying to. I can deal with a day of discomfort.Upgrading seats on flights. I just don’t see how it is worth spending at least $800 more than normal seats. The difference is marginal and not worth the cost.
I'm 5'1" and leg room has NEVER been an issue!This. I'm 6'5" and could use the extra legroom, but I know I'll still be uncomfortable with a few extra inches and I'd rather put the money towards more drinks wherever I'm flying to. I can deal with a day of discomfort.
Golf clubs. I recently started playing a lot more golf than I used to but still have my clubs from ten plus years ago. A friend paid $500 for a new driver. I wouldn’t pay that much for a whole set of used clubs.
Exactly. On most of today's vehicles I would gladly take your $2,500 extended warranty dollars and bet against breakdowns. Maybe we should start a car warranty company. Hire an experience mechanic to do the repairs in a central location, invest the dollars in a 4.5% money market account, pay the dealership their 20% kickback.And then when something does go wrong it's all... "Yeah, sorry but that particular part isn't covered." Never fails. Luckily Honda Pilots have very few issues, at least that's been our experience with the two we've owned.
Same with golf clubs. Why do I need a $800 driver for my 50 pound over weight middle aged body that is not flexible enough for a $50 driver? Or a $200 gap wedge, when my spalding pitching wedge puts it in the sand just as easyGolf BALLS.
I don't need to drop $8 for a ball, when I can buy a Kirkland ball that is 90% as good for $1. And its 100% as good when I shank the fker into the woods. I would have to be 20x better skilled than I am for the ball I am playing to matter one iota.
My wife used to say, "Why spend that much on something you're going to poop out the next day!"I refuse to go out to eat at a steakhouse and spend $100+ on a couple of steak dinners when I can do that myself at home on the grill. We go out to eat for other things, but going out for steak dinner just isn’t happening.