Quote:
Originally Posted by popo
a dental education at a private university costs ~$35-40k tuition/year plus living expenses & instruments, etc. Going to school in Boston where rent was in the $1200 range leads to around 60k/year with living expenses and instruments. That's $240k for 4 years. I'm doing a 5 year residency in a school that has that same tuition for 3 of the 5 years. That's another $115k plus. Add in a modest ~$30k for undergrad loans. As I already noted, my loans are private loans with high interest rates that have been accumulating interest from Day 1. It's around $400k plus what 3 more years of interest will do. 4 years ago my wife was earning $28k/year and has moved up to what she earns now. Over the past couple years she has just this month finished payed off her own personal student loans (~$30k). She maxes out the retirement funding to the poin t where she takes home less than half her gross. There are no scholarships available for this type of education. And no, I haven't financed family members or others, as you can see. I'm not sure how you get that I'm living the lavish lifestyle with a 1999 Altima (110k miles) and a 1998 Civic (160k miles and paid for). I commute 74 miles/day and my wife commutes 52 miles/day. Local gas prices average $2.55 now. Figure out the cost.
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Thanks for spelling it out. I wasn't trying to be harsh. I was just trying to get my brain around that kind of student loan debt. I didn't mean to reflect anything poorly on you as I wasn't aware of your whole situation. Now that we know that your wife has only recently moved to a higher paying job, the other debt makes some more sense. I guess my comments were partially based on friends I had in college who took the maximum in student loans even when they didn't need it, then turned around and used the money to buy new cars, bikes, plasma TVs, you name it.
It sounds like you have gotten some good, sound advice on here. Best of luck with your future career.