Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
shenzheniffer,
you COULD live out in sai kung, get a cheaper place and buy a used car. we've done it.
we are paying less than $20k for 2100' home. 5 bed, 4 bath, garden, 2 car parks.
we bought an el cheapo car ($8000) and i use it to commute daily to tsing yi. it still works out to be MUCH cheaper than most places. it takes me 45 minutes door-to-door.
ideally, i would love to live a little closer to work, but that is just not in the cards. i would rather be on the road an extra 20 minutes per day and enjoy the space we have.
it is a trade-off though.

but, thanka, my remarks were mostly directed at those who ARE getting huge allowances and still complain that they can't get what they want.... you should read some forums, "i've ONLY got a $75K housing allowance and i can't find ANYTHING decent!" makes me wanna smack 'em upside the head!
ps> if you are interested, i can have a look around for something in your price range...what would you be willing to spend on rent and i'll see if i can find anything closer to town with a roof or garden area...the flat woudl be 700'...
Anyway we're trying to avoid those expenses as long as possible. We're trying to make choices that put us in the most advantageous financial position possible even though it means we don't get everything we want. With getting "everything we want" as one other poster pointed out, you can also end up having to keep up just to maintain the status quo. Even though we work hard to keep our financial obligations low, I've also realized how easy it is for us here in HK to get sucked into building up a lifestyle that then becomes like a voracious monster that you keep having to feed loads of cash too. We just prefer having a cushion of finances as much as possible and not committing ourselves to anything that may become financial unsustainable in the future.beachedwhale
(Only because that's how I feel a lot!)she asked her husband to choose whether he wanted his family or he wanted World of Warcraft (the video game) and he chose the latter.
Wow!! That's sad.
Hate to say it but some men are total idiots. But, it's not any different, in my opinion, to choose work or money over family. It's one thing to work because you need the money but some men (and women) are addicted to their work and climbing the ladder. Anyway...
To be fair, he is not a cheater, works hard to provide for us, is generally a good dad to our toddler and very hands on about playing with her. It is really just the drinking and this issue of going back to the US that are causing my heartache.
It doesn't help that he is in finance and would have no job back home, whereas his career is soaring out here, and that with all the damage from the economic crisis, violent gun deaths and other 'problems' with the US he always has something to argue, logically, against going home.
Today, I found this old thread I started back in 2009. As an update, I just had my second child here in HK. And this morning, had a 'fight' with my husband about going back to the US. This stemmed from his stumbling home drunk last night after being compelled to go grab drinks with a boss, as is somehow the only thing people in finance think to do as male bonding, and being that he is exhausted from our newborn and his really brilliant decision not to eat and just drink instead, passing out without showering in our bed and then pulling the comforter over our newborn's head - we are cosleeping. I thankfully heard her muffled cries and saved her. When I yelled at him because of what he had done, he basically almost rolled on top of her. The next morning he had to be told about what he did, as he apparently had blacked it out.
Yup, many men (and many women too) are idiots, but lets not expand the scope and make this guy into a monster he is not.
You didn't read where that quote came from. I was speaking of my friend's husband who left the family so he could play video games. That was idiotic.
This guy in question likes his drink with the boys and doesnt want to leave Hong Kong. This is not a crime nor is it IMO reason for a split. There may be other things not yet said, but based on what we know, this guy is not a bad guy.
Hmmmm....no, it's not a crime, but his priorities are probably not in the right place. When you get married and become a father--especially when you become a father--your priorities need to change if you still want to remain married and be part of your kids' lives. No one said he was a "bad guy"--there are a lot of "good guys" who just have their priorities mixed up. And there are even "good guys" who just have their priorities mixed up for a time in their lives and then straighten themselves out.
Why would anyone want to leave a successful career here to face a no-job situation in a place that is far more dangerous than here. For me and my family, logic trumps heart.
Because that person makes his wife and children's happiness priority #1, that's why. Just because this family goes back to the States does not automatically mean they are going to live in a dangerous place or face a no-job situation. There are a lot of factors that come into play. This guy doesn't seem to care about any of that--he just likes this ladder climbing expedition he's on (hence he goes to drink with the boss to kiss a** and try to get brownie points--that game).
Thanka--wow, really, some guy chose a video game over his family? That is REALLY sad.