Casler1 Posted June 9 #1 Posted June 9 We all have different baselines for what we considered "making it" when we were younger. For some, it was ordering whatever you wanted at a restaurant instead of looking at the prices first; for others, it was branded cereal or central AC. If you didn’t grow up privileged, what was that one thing that screamed "luxury" to you?
Moderator KatarinaDo Posted June 10 Moderator #2 Posted June 10 When I was a child, cake and pizza were something we only had for birthdays. 🍰🍕 Whenever I visited someone, and they had a cake at home, I would assume that someone in the family had celebrated a birthday in the past few days. It always seemed very strange to me when there was a cake and nobody's birthday had taken place. AleksandarG and MarkoDr 1 1
Moderator MarkoDr Posted June 10 Moderator #3 Posted June 10 For me it is going to the supermarket, and not looking for the cheapest brand or pack of the thing u came to buy. Earlier i would count every penny i had, if i could maybe take a sneaky candy bar, without my parents knowing. If i got money and they told me that i could buy some sweets i would be happy like i won the Grammy awards. KatarinaDo 1
Moderator NebojsaBu Posted June 10 Moderator #4 Posted June 10 I must agree with @KatarinaDo and @MarkoDr here, cake and pizza wasnt a usual food some1 had, it was only for special occasions like birthdays, and also going to a super market was a luxury by itself, we could only go to local shops and still count the money we had and calculate what we can have and what we can not. MarkoDr and MilicaRa 1 1
Moderator AndreaMT Posted yesterday at 02:05 AM Moderator #6 Posted yesterday at 02:05 AM When I was little, I definitely thought that a luxury was going out for dinner or lunch at a restaurant from time to time… or even ever. We could go out for a family lunch maybe once every two or three years when I was a child.😅
Fuj1tora Posted yesterday at 02:07 AM #7 Posted yesterday at 02:07 AM Luxury is not worrying about that price tag when you are shopping.
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