By: Revanche

Our big luxuries

April 4, 2018

The luxuries we choose We appreciate the little things that fulfill our sense of luxury but the big things are amazing because we can afford some things that were totally out of reach for me 20 years ago.

The pricey daycare

This is for all of us. Our local preschool wait list is 3-4 years long so we’re not specifically choosing this over the muuuuuch cheaper preschool, but I view it as a luxury to pick this particular option instead of a home care option. Home care options are significantly cheaper but since we don’t know anyone who can refer us to a good one, we just don’t have the peace of mind that ze will be treated well and that any violations or mistreatment of children will be immediately reported by the other people who work at the facility. Our facility isn’t perfect, but they DO self-report any time there are infractions where other people might dismiss them as “not that bad”.

JB LOVES the teachers at this daycare and all the resources they have: books, toys, iPads, desktops where ze can pretend to be me. They are located close to PiC’s work which makes dropoff much easier, we love that their schedule mirrors PiC’s work schedule so neither of us has to take precious days off to cover childcare on holidays.

Empty spaces

We have 2 cabinets in our kitchen that are almost completely empty. I have no plans or desire to add to it any time soon. It’s my favorite non-thing about the kitchen! The emptiness is a promise to myself that if we want to grow or change or add, we can without feeling claustrophobic and that we are committing to not expanding to fill every empty space just because it exists. We’re respecting the space.

My ideal closet is a half empty room, housing exactly what I need, a couple of extra lovely soft cuddly things for cold days and nights, and a wide open space. For possibilities!

Four legged friends

Seamus is a delight and a comfort. He keeps my blood pressure down, generates fabulous sleeping dog scent while he cuddles nearby, and intervenes when JB is driving us all loonytunes.

He brings pure joy when he’s sleep-roaching, when he’s converting a friend who is afraid of dogs into a doglover, when he’s sunbathing and grins with tongue lolling and stretched gaping joyful jaws. He requires a lot of hands on care and he’s worth every minute and every penny.

Travel

As a confirmed hermit, and would be shut-in, who hates to be away from her home and dogs, you would think that travel would be my last priority for spending. In some ways, it is – I hate paying full freight on flights, rental cars, lodgings. But it’s important so I travel hack to make it affordable. We live far away from friends and family so, as a purely practical matter, it’s the only way we’re going to spend time with a lot of them as they have families themselves and it’s no longer just a matter of driving across town and dropping in for dinner.

“Be fearless in the pursuit of what sets your soul on fire.” – Jennifer Lee

The non practical side of it is simply this: discovery. It’s so easy to lose sight of the world out there. It’s really easy to let our own narrow range of lived experiences come to encompass all experiences, to overwrite the wealth of the world’s beauty and inspiration because it’s easier and, for me, less painful to stay home. It’s easy for friends and family to forget that I live with pain as a companion every minute, it’s most definitely easier for me to avoid those exertions that bring on even worse pain. Hiking, exploring new countries, walking to new food experiences, riding horses through Scotland? That sounds fantastic, except that after the first flushes of excitement, I come home to my body. Where I live, the view never changes. It would truly be much easier to avoid travel. That ease makes it much more imperative that we don’t fall into that trap. Even if it costs money, takes a lot of time and precious brainpower, it’s a luxury that we can afford and should afford for ourselves.

In my family, travel hasn’t ever been a thing you did for fun. You traveled when you were leaving everything you knew, for good. Emigration, not tourism. Now that we can, we should.

Laurie described great reasons for international tourism more eloquently than I can manage right now, but Done by Forty reminded me of another one: our children are going to be raised by very different parents than we were. Our parents were immigrants who came here with nothing but the clothes on their backs. By contrast, we are basically wealthy people. Not just compared to our parents, compared to much of the world. As such, it’s even more important that our children be exposed to more cultures and languages and society with different values so they understand that there is so much more to the world than just what they know here.

:: What big extras do you prioritize?

14 Responses to “Our big luxuries”

  1. Sense says:

    Yay for travel!!

    In my daily budget, I prioritize items that feel luxurious because I’m always so stressed out and limited with time by my PhD. Things like hiring a cityhop car to grab groceries and do errands rather than waiting for the always-late bus, walking the extra bit to and from bus stop with heavy groceries, etc. They go a very long way to helping me lower my stress levels and keeping my energy up. I also prioritize healthy food. Normally I’d price compare and go to all the other stores but I just go to one now and eat the extra cost. It’s all worth it.

    In long-term budget, I prioritize travel and seeing my family, which involves traveling to see them. 🙂

  2. Yay for Seamus!

    Right now my priorities feel pretty decadent: food, gym, travel (while we’re still pre-kids), room in our home to grow into as a family. I feel like I’m inclined to be very self-centered in my spending now because once daycare is on our list of expenses there will be a lot fewer personal luxuries in the future.
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    • Revanche says:

      All excellent choices! Make sure to remember at least one luxury for yourself to keep up post-kids, though. We haven’t been great about that and it IS important.

  3. Ha, Tim is addicted to sleeping dog scent too. And our animals definitely keep our blood pressure down. Well, when something they’re doing/costing isn’t spiking it.

    I’m really glad you pay for daycare. For sanity’s/work’s sake it really is necessary.
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  4. International travel, plus an apartment in a desirable neighborhood with amenities. Our apartment is older and more worn, so that’s the trade-off. Clothes that make me feel most like me. We also have two cats (my husband’s), and my husband also spends a good amount on his son (activities, camps, etc.)

  5. Some days, everything feels like an extra or a luxury. And I like it!

    Hmmm…Buying books, traveling, living close to family even if it means paying higher taxes, etc.

    • Revanche says:

      YES. I love that too. I love being more mindful of how wonderful it is we have a quiet safe home, that we have each other in reasonably ok health all things considered, that we have lights on in the house during the day, and plumbing that always runs. It is ALL luxurious!

      <3

  6. I like what you have to say about four-legged friends. We lost our Rocky 5 months ago, and he has left a surprising emptiness. I didn’t know if it would happen at all, and I certainly didn’t think it would happen so soon, but we’re planning to get a puppy soon. The blood pressure thing is real!
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    • Revanche says:

      They are incredible for blood pressure! Even if, as other people have pointed out, they are also complicit in raising it occasionally 😉

  7. I have very similar thoughts on travel as you. I’m also a homebody but am always willing to make an exception for travel, as long as it’s not too long of a trip. I don’t see myself ever being somehow who is comfortable with having no fixed location or pursuing long-term travel.

    My pups are also a joy I’d never be willing to give up, even if they are costly in both money and time. They always seem to know just what I need, even if that’s pestering me until I get my butt off the couch to take them for a walk.

    • Revanche says:

      I’ve discovered that 2 weeks is my absolute max for being away from home and family – even if only the dog was left behind. If I had everyone with me, I think I could go for 3 weeks but no more than that.

      Dogs, FTW!

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