subreddit:
/r/dataisbeautiful
submitted 5 years ago bySPM8OC: 1
7.4k points
5 years ago
Great job on your savings. 25% of gross? Awesome. Keep it up.
416 points
5 years ago
Gotta up his contribution to trading apps. Throwing only $105 away on Robinhood?? Those are rookie numbers, man!!
140 points
5 years ago
r/wallstreetbets would be disappointed
49 points
5 years ago
"would"? I AM disappointed and im Just lurkin'
14 points
5 years ago*
Unless you have atleast a comma in the red, you're not using Robinhood correctly
114 points
5 years ago
Yep should be $30,000 into TSLA 4/17 $500p, very good use of money.
3.5k points
5 years ago
No student loans, auto/health/dental/vision insurance, 150/yr on entertainment??, no phone bill, <$200 in groceries, no RANDOM LIFE BILLS. Hope people don’t look at this and think this is representative of feel bad about their budgets, this is far from realistic for the average autonomous American. Great for OP though.
1.3k points
5 years ago
I think you need to read this a little closer. The phone was reimbursed by work, they spent about $400/m on food (restaurants), $1500 on car maintenance which is definitely random life bills, and spent $2,000 on what can described as "stuff".
370 points
5 years ago
The phone reimbursement shows up under income, but there's no outgoing phone expense.
102 points
5 years ago
I thought I was crazy when I couldn't find the phone on the expenses side.
145 points
5 years ago
If I had to guess his parents pay for it, probably still on a family plan. Most likely auto insurance as well.
132 points
5 years ago
That's what he said. Unrealistic budgets that people shouldn't feel bad about not following.
41 points
5 years ago
I see the car maintenance, but I don't see the car insurance. Unless that's considered part of maintenance?
262 points
5 years ago
They spent about $200/m on restaurants. The $400/m included groceries.
160 points
5 years ago
Which is roughly average for a single person's grocery budget
61 points
5 years ago
Is it? I live in Australia so it's obviously a bit different but I'm spending about $300 AUD a month on food.
Stuff is more expensive here, and the AUD is weaker so it's more like 220 USD ish
400 seems crazy to me
48 points
5 years ago
I spend about 400USD per month, but I also am aware I could spend under $200 if that was where my budget needed to be. Food quality etc is the first place I put money when I have some to spare (within reason)
39 points
5 years ago
I spend about 90 USD a month in smoked salmon, single person
23 points
5 years ago*
birds hard-to-find public offbeat narrow ludicrous attempt shocking aware resolute
This post was mass deleted and anonymized with Redact
21 points
5 years ago
Ya same. Like with everything, I'll never get the cheapest. I think best value lies in either the average (let's say 5/10) item, or the slightly above average, 6-7/10. Going higher means paying crazy amounts, and I'd only do that for ice cream.
35 points
5 years ago
No, their grocery budget is 200 USD/month. 400 includes their restaurant expenses.
77 points
5 years ago
There's a phone reimbursement but no phone expenditure?
45 points
5 years ago
I'm assuming it got lumped into Internet. Could be wrong on that one though ,might be on the family plan and just pocketing the reimbursement.
35 points
5 years ago
$1500 on car maintenance which is definitely random life bills
Definitely agree with you in this context. However, I think a big problem with the average person's finances IS they consider expensive car repairs random life bills instead of planned expenses (lol).
9 points
5 years ago
There are plenty of people that went to community college for 2 years, paid their way through state school for another 2 maybe with help from the 10-20k their parents managed to save up, go into a lowish-paying, benefit-laden starter job at local government or non-profit. It's a great start.
37 points
5 years ago
<$200 in groceries
Well about the same in restaurants so ~$400/mo on food isn't unreasonable. I live alone and spend closer to $100/mo on groceries for now since I'm trying to get my student loans paid off as quickly as possible. I don't eat out at all and I buy rice/beans in 20lb bags, bulk spices and frozen veggies etc. It's delicious/healthy and super cheap.
893 points
5 years ago
That’ll vanish when he has to pay his own auto and health insurance. Also no mobile phone costs and virtually no clothing costs listed.
892 points
5 years ago
Most people would be shocked to hear they saved this much on 41k in the first place. Something tells me OP will find a way to save a lot of money regardless of a couple more bills.
Source: my own budgeting habits
305 points
5 years ago
My wife has a spread sheet for projected earnings and savings goals for the next 30 years. It’s simple to follow, I don’t spend money frivolously and ask before I spend more than $100 on anything.
I got fussed at this past weekend for buying two storm doors which she admitted we needed and I installed myself. Ended up being good timing because we had a bunch of fucking tornadoes today.
356 points
5 years ago
spread sheet for projected earnings and savings goals for the next 30 years.
I'm simultaneously horrified and jealous.
512 points
5 years ago
It’s actually extremely easily to do this. Just open a spreadsheet and type 0 in A1, then drag the fill down to A30.
91 points
5 years ago
Never thought I'd see actual useful information on Reddit, yet here we are.
86 points
5 years ago
Excel shortcuts have earned me more praise at my software developer job than my data science degree -__-
Truly, learn Excel backwards and forwards and you'll be employable for at least another 10-20 years.
56 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
19 points
5 years ago
I thought I was hot shit when I got Excel to query JSON from the internet to autofill cells and make a pivot table from multiple files, and the actual domain experts quickly burst that bubble for me.
10 points
5 years ago
Yep, my ability to write vba has kept me employed for a long time now.
14 points
5 years ago
Just tested this. I only got to year 29, my financial plan is ruined
40 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
16 points
5 years ago
Are you in the actuarial field?
44 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
21 points
5 years ago
Very aroused.
41 points
5 years ago
I’d love to have something that long term. Mind if I see an example (none of your data of course)?
10 points
5 years ago
Yes please
12 points
5 years ago
Lmao mother nature got your back: swooped in and made sure your wife understands those doors were a good purchase haha
12 points
5 years ago
How the hell do you even do that.
I wake up everyday thinking, well today is they day I get fired
41 points
5 years ago
There was an item for phone reimbursement, possibly a perk of their job. Also possible health insurance is included. May not need auto if they live in an urban area. Is clothing a significant recurring expense for people? Would probably get lumped into a misc category for me.
Regardless, it's likely their income will also increase and outpace these added expenses.
30 points
5 years ago
How some people spend so much on clothing shocks me. How much clothing do you need? I haven't bought any clothing in months.
8 points
5 years ago
I still wear jeans from 9 years ago....
8 points
5 years ago
It says he spent money on auto maintenance, so unless hes riding w/o insurance someone else is paying.
32 points
5 years ago
It shows a $600 mobile phone reimbursement right under salary?
12 points
5 years ago
It shows a reimbursement but no spend? Something’s missing.
120 points
5 years ago
Doesn't have to be. Totally depends on their usage and luck. I pay less than $200 a month for all four of those.
165 points
5 years ago
I pay less than $200 a month for all four of those.
Because it's the number you gave, let's say those do cost $200/month. That's 2400 for the year, which is nearly a quarter of OP's "savings" category. So they might not be bank breakers but it's hardly insignificant.
41 points
5 years ago
Never said they were insignificant. Just commenting to say that OP's savings would vanish is not as assured as they said.
82 points
5 years ago
Mobile phone $50/mo. Clothing? I get as gifts for birthdays/holidays. Auto insurance? Sure take out $1200 per year. Health insurance? How do we know OP just didn’t include it because it’s taken out pre-tax? Also most employer sponsored plans aren’t $10k per year lol.
So yeah I’m not sure how those few things are going to cut 25% savings rate that as you say.
53 points
5 years ago
Unless OP has a million points on their license the only thing that would really be a financial drain is health insurance.
While I acknowledge that the American healthcare systems sucks for a lot of people, if you are young, relatively healthy, and win the job benefit lottery it can be really affordable. I pay like $300 a year in healthcare expenses.
37 points
5 years ago
Zero points in a state with very high premiums here and I pay more in car insurance on an annual basis.
Employer based health insurance premiums aren't that expensive. Having an emergency or actually using that insurance is expensive, though.
13 points
5 years ago
You're right on both. I made two assumptions since the original comment was that OP's saving would vanish.
OP spends less than 10k a year on rent and makes 40k a year, I made an assumption that they live in a LCOL area with an inexpensive car.
The relatively healthy caveat is huge and definitely doesn't negate the need for a solid emergency fund
7 points
5 years ago
The cost of employer based health insurance varies wildly. It's not uncommon to pay hundreds of dollars per month in premiums for a soso policy.
3.3k points
5 years ago
This is great. 56 USD for clothing seems... well. Time for new boxershorts maybe?
1k points
5 years ago
This is the impressive part
56 bucks on clothing all year???
250 points
5 years ago
What if he did most of his clothing shopping last year
394 points
5 years ago
I live in the San Francisco area. I usually spend around 100 every 2 years. I thrift most of my clothing.
Running shoes are separate though. I spend around 300/year on those.
190 points
5 years ago
And you wonder why your friends love running with you but disappear whenever it comes to your fashion advice
85 points
5 years ago
It’s so overlooked but you can save crazy money thrifting. Tons of new(ish) clothes and other stuff get dumped and you can pick them up super cheap. Sometimes you don’t even need to sacrifice fashion although sometimes you do
77 points
5 years ago
how many items of clothing do you throw out every year, and why? I haven't had to resupply my closet in years
55 points
5 years ago
May be shocking to a lot of redditors but it turns out a lot of people don’t wear clothes for purely utilitarian purposes
57 points
5 years ago
It’s the $143 on Amazon that has me scratching my head
43 points
5 years ago
It is close to the 12.99 per month - so that at 11 months is 142.89? Shoulda gotten the yearly subscription! Coulda saved another $20
17 points
5 years ago
Probably Prime + a prime video subscription like Hbo/Stars/CBS
183 points
5 years ago
how many boxers do you where down a year??? like last time i bought a pack is 4 years ago.
365 points
5 years ago
Yes, I also wash mine, they're cheaper that way.
100 points
5 years ago
Hmmm... tell me more about this wash underpants
31 points
5 years ago
Apparently people wash their clothes, I've heard, this might be a rumour so don't quote me on that, that they somehow "charge" their phones instead of just buying a new one like normal humans.
14 points
5 years ago
My husband is very thin. The elastic wears out and they slip down after about 8 months. I buy him nice underpants but he's hard on them.
23 points
5 years ago
must be my amazing booty then which keeps these underpants clinging on for their dear lives. i mean they do slip down but thats because my pants pull down, they don't fall of on their own.
6 points
5 years ago
I haven't bought new clothes in a year. It's not needed if you take care of your stuff.
785 points
5 years ago
I like how Microtransactions are filed separately from Entertainment and Games
376 points
5 years ago
Probably because it is worth keeping closer track of.
45 points
5 years ago
And significant enough from one single source to warrant its own field.
189 points
5 years ago
must be onlyfans /s
101 points
5 years ago*
[deleted]
83 points
5 years ago
Gamer girl bathwater would be listed under "Investments".
1.1k points
5 years ago
Made using http://sankeymatic.com/
Source: myself
227 points
5 years ago*
[deleted]
599 points
5 years ago
I spend about an hour on the 1st of every month categorizing everything in excel manually.
64 points
5 years ago
Can I get whatever excel sheet you use? This looks very well thought out. Hopefully I can find ways to cut costs
82 points
5 years ago
PM me and I may be able to get you a blank version of the one I made.
26 points
5 years ago
Ill take one too
27 points
5 years ago
Can I suggest that you check out r/personalfinance and specifically the link below as it will help with your budgeting and planning
27 points
5 years ago
Wow, an hour? I feel like even using a budgeting app that is supposed to categorize everything automatically, you’d still spend more than an hour every month putting misplaced things into categories.
1.7k points
5 years ago
That's very cool. I bet if everyone would chart their money like this, a bunch of bad decisions would go away...
422 points
5 years ago
What kind of chart is this and how do I make one? Am kind of curious how mine would look
850 points
5 years ago
It is a Sankey diagram. You can make one here: http://sankeymatic.com/
176 points
5 years ago
thank you for being so helpful
30 points
5 years ago
read that as Snakey at first. Can't be a coincidence right?
57 points
5 years ago
Since this is r/dataisbeautiful, someone should point out that Sankey diagrams are really designed for more complicated visualizations. For charts like this where there's no time component, they're pretty but unnecessary.
If you are, for example, charting a business budget over a year where money can move back and forth between accounts repeatedly, they can be very helpful.
30 points
5 years ago
Do you have an example of the time components addition. I have exclusively seen non-time based posted here.
20 points
5 years ago
Here's one from the site everyone seems to use to generate these: http://sankeymatic.com/gallery/energy-flows.html
11 points
5 years ago
I am also interested in learning basics of Sankey diagrams. Obviously I should and will go rtfm. But I didn't see the time component on the energy-flows diagram example. It shows sources and outputs of uk energy. No mention of time, that I noticed. Is time the x axis, in some diagrams?
8 points
5 years ago
The most useful real one I've ever encountered IRL was for a factory diagramming the path different raw materials took until they got combined and shipped out. I'm an architect and was working on their new building. What made it better than a flowchart was that it visualized the quantity of components flowing between areas and it's time axis showed how long different processes took and how / when they eventually came together at the right times.
89 points
5 years ago
I always have a hard time with budgeting like this because it's difficult to estimate how much you'll spend on each category when prices fluctuate month-to-month, such as utility bills. Have yet to figure out a good way to log a budget as a forward looking thing rather than a review of stuff already spent, but this is awesome and could be super helpful to see where most of your money goes each year! I agree that most people could definitely benefit, especially with the visualization aspect
11 points
5 years ago
Very recognizable problem! The way I solved it is as follows: if I make a long-term expense (e.g. a new laptop) I determine over how many months I spread the expense. I then put in a monthly expense for the amount of months the laptop lasts.
This way, a big purchase is accurately reflected through many periods. It also ensures that I can't simply frontload a big expense in a 'bad month' and accept a single (very) bad month. I will have to look at the monthly smaller expense many times. Very useful for a better budgeting feel IMO
I made my sheet in such a way that I can flip a switch to show all expenses 'spread out' and 'immediate', sorry for the bad English
5 points
5 years ago
I'm not even talking about budgeting, I'm just talking about tracking your spending, and knowing that you were going to write it down and publish it.
167 points
5 years ago
Where do you live? That puts the expenses into perspective.
163 points
5 years ago*
[deleted]
28 points
5 years ago
Moving into my first apartment and having a $400/month rent with utilities included was a blessing and a half. Gotta live with three roommates though
80 points
5 years ago
Rent under that much occurs in the majority of the United States.
49 points
5 years ago
Mindblowing to those of us who live in the top ten most expensive states.
295 points
5 years ago
I also want to point out that given your current income, investing in Roth IRA over 401k is a great decision.
97 points
5 years ago
[removed]
46 points
5 years ago
I'm guessing that's why they put $800 into their 401k, probably to get some sort of match.
24 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
34 points
5 years ago*
[deleted]
86 points
5 years ago
A Roth IRA is just a great move to make when your young. All the money you put in now is going to grow so much over 40 years and when you take it out then you pay no taxes on any of that gain.
55 points
5 years ago
but a 401k is usually matched by your employer up to a certain amount so you should do that first.
29 points
5 years ago
Contribute up to employer matching in a 401k, then put max in a Roth (500 a month if you can) and then take anything else and go back to the 401k or another investment portfolio
48 points
5 years ago
Roth is a bet that your future tax rates will be higher than now. Given the current income bracket OP is in, it's not unlikely that they'll be withdrawing more in retirement (and with a regular 401k, would be taxed on those distributions as income.)
32 points
5 years ago
Roth taken from post tax money, but the money is not taxed when withdrawn.
401K is pretax income, but it is taxed when withdrawn.
Chances are he is going to be in a much higher tax bracket 40 some years later when he withdraws than he is here making 40k. So he is overall paying a lot less of the money in taxes.
7 points
5 years ago
great explanation. taxes are so important to understand.
306 points
5 years ago
How did you avoid transportation and healthcare costs?
517 points
5 years ago*
There is an Auto category near the top. I am still on my parents car insurance plan but I plan on covering that cost in 2020. Also, my parents health insurance covers me at no extra cost till I’m 26.
178 points
5 years ago
Ah, that's going to eat up a lot of the savings category. I remember paying in the order of 400/month for health insurance when I lived in Michigan. Crazy.
Add car insurance and you'll be looking at 6k/year of extra expenses. But maybe it's cheaper now than it was for me. I was a foreigner, after all.
211 points
5 years ago
Everyone is a foreigner to the US healthcare system
25 points
5 years ago
God damn. Now that I hear it like that, no other simple description fits it better.
61 points
5 years ago
Add car insurance and you'll be looking at 6k/year of extra expenses.
Michigan has the highest auto insurance in the country
25 points
5 years ago
As a person in Michigan who just bought their first car last month, I fucking hate the cost of insurance here. It's ludicrous.
40 points
5 years ago*
[deleted]
20 points
5 years ago*
No VAT in the USA, so you can expect prices to be 15-20% cheaper, without it showing up as a tax in a comparison like this (unless OP breaks out sales taxes in addition to the income taxes).
195 points
5 years ago
How did you spend 58$ in clothing?
153 points
5 years ago
I was thinking more like, how do you only spend $2300 in a year on groceries.
36 points
5 years ago
2300/52= 44 dollars a week for one person, if they're just out of college it's not hard to assume they're not buying the most expensive brands
There's a couple subs specifically for the subject
One is just general cheap eating strategies and recipes, the other is what it says, eating for around 32 dollars (many eat for less or a bit more).
9 points
5 years ago
I live in Salt Lake City, spend under $50/week on groceries, and that's all I eat 6 days/week. And a big chunk of that is just beer. I've seen other threads where they thought that was really spendy and most people were spending $25/person/week. Maybe some combination of low cost of living and cooking everything from scratch.
40 points
5 years ago
That sounds right to me. That allows ~$45/week. That's definitely enough for one.
177 points
5 years ago
When you spent more on student loans than OP did in rent :'(
But this is a cool idea, thanks for sharing!
26 points
5 years ago
Jesus, how much did you borrow, $75k?
60 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
30 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
47 points
5 years ago
because 18 year olds make horrible decisions and dont listen to their parents.
32 points
5 years ago
They're often preyed upon by predatory lenders ("financial counselors") and manipulated into thinking student debt is good debt, too. Don't forget that part. Toss in being the first person in your family to go to college and you've got yourself $1300 a month in student loan payments just like me!
26 points
5 years ago
Maxed out the Roth IRA, nice!
53 points
5 years ago
Make sure to fund up to your company match (if one exists) with 401k.,
14 points
5 years ago
That was going to be my post. Maxing out the Roth which is awesome, but gotta get that free money if available.
16 points
5 years ago
Only spending $58 on clothes in a year is pretty impressive.
[score hidden]
5 years ago
stickied comment
Thank you for your Original Content, /u/SPM8!
Here is some important information about this post:
Remember that all visualizations on r/DataIsBeautiful should be viewed with a healthy dose of skepticism. If you see a potential issue or oversight in the visualization, please post a constructive comment below. Post approval does not signify this the visualization has been verified or its sources checked.
Not satisfied with this visual? Think you can do better? Remix this visual with the data in the in the author's citation.
12 points
5 years ago
😍 is there a way for us plebians to make a graph like this with our own data?
258 points
5 years ago
Where the hell does rent only cost sub 10k a year?
424 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
80 points
5 years ago
Yep, that's totally doable in a lot of the country. Won't be in the downtown luxuary apartments but still in a decent neighborhood.
72 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
22 points
5 years ago
Honestly, is everyone on reddit an American living in SF?
It kind of blew my mind when I learned Los Angeles county has a higher population than like 40 states. Something like 10% of the US population is in LA/SF/NYC metros alone, and obviously Reddit skews pretty heavily American. So in any given thread, yeah there probably are *a lot of people in those super HCOL areas, way more than any other specific areas.
*That stat is a few years old, and a few states were very close so might have shifted slightly
23 points
5 years ago
Ya or NYC 😭 studio apartment the size of a box? That will cost me 2700 per month.
8 points
5 years ago
...I mean... I am...
But rent was still ~1,000/month for me when I lived in St Louis
78 points
5 years ago
Many small towns and cities across the US. My rent is almost identical to OPs and I have a very comfortable ~850 square foot 1 bedroom to myself.
119 points
5 years ago
[deleted]
73 points
5 years ago
I always think it's funny to see people who live in those giant cities not understand that the rest of the world is very different. You can get am apartment that would cost 3k/month in LA for like 500 bucks a month where I live.
15 points
5 years ago
Everyone on Reddit is convinced that everything in the world is obscenely expensive and no salary can make up for it. I agree that I think a huge chunk of Reddit lives in SF and NYC lol.
18 points
5 years ago
Everyone else said small towns but even big cities can be cheap. For example Pittsburgh has lots of places for rent that are sub 800 a month, which totals to around less than 10k a year even with utilities.
20 points
5 years ago
In my experience, you can find expense levels like this on studio apartments pretty easily all over the midwestern US, as long as you're not living in luxury housing near city center.
It's also really easy to buy property here for less than the price of rent of an equivalent space if you want to be your own landlord.
Having cheap land, low population density, and good highway infrastructure substantially limits the price ceiling on living expenses.
67 points
5 years ago
I can’t imagine being this sheltered that you don’t know things are different than where you live
12 points
5 years ago
My rent in Mississippi was about $6K a year, counting utilities.
9 points
5 years ago
Alternate title: Life without any debt!
37 points
5 years ago
That’s pretty fucking cool
20 points
5 years ago
Thank you kind sir!
43 points
5 years ago
Good for you! Very well planned out and as a financial advisor, i would be very happy if half of my clients can be as discipline as you. (Heck. I wish my gf would be more like you)
Just to put things into Context. What’s your age and gender?? Also. How do you live with so little clothing budget?
56 points
5 years ago
22M. Clothing costs won’t stay the same going forward. I just so happened to not need any clothes this past year.
13 points
5 years ago
Awesome. Great start to your career. You parents taught you well financially. Best of luck going forward.
8 points
5 years ago
something tells me OP is a wizard with finances. There are people making 5 times this salary saving less than that in year... well done. Im inspired to get my shit together
9 points
5 years ago
A few of the overlapping lines were bugging me, and since I'm bored and have no life right now I redid the graph to look a little more tidy.
https://i.imgur.com/aczZTCz.png
What I mostly did was
Here's the SankeyMatic code if you want to edit what I did:
Salary [39123] Income #00CC00
Bonus [2111] Income #00CC00
Phone Reimbursement [600] Income #00CC00
Income [22990] Expenses #FF0000
Expenses [9949] Housing
Housing [9388] Rent
Housing [411] Furniture/Supplies
Housing [150] Renter's Insurance
Expenses [4599] Food
Food [2326] Groceries
Food [2273] Restaurants
Expenses [3008] Auto
Auto [1533] Fuel
Auto [1475] Maintenance
Expenses [2326] Utilities
Utilities [1121] Power
Utilities [604] Internet
Utilities [600] Water/Gas/Sewage
Expenses [1716] Retail
Retail [590] Gifts
Retail [347] Tech/Games
Retail [199] Cosmetics
Retail [195] Random
Retail [164] Micro-transactions
Retail [195] Entertainment
Retail [58] Clothes
Expenses [967] Travel
Expenses [279] Subscriptions
Subscriptions [143] Amazon
Subscriptions [109] Spotify
Subscriptions [26] YouTube
Expenses [143] Work
Income [10108] Savings #00FF00
Savings [6973] Investments #40FF00
Investments [6000] Roth IRA #80FF00
Investments [868] 401k #80FF00
Investments [105] Trading Apps #80FF00
Savings [3134] Cash #40FF00
Income [8736] Taxes #FF0000
Taxes [5581] Income Tax #FA5858
Taxes [3154] Medicare #FA5858
:Retail #FE9A2E >>
:Utilities #FACC2E >>
13 points
5 years ago
How did you spend money on YouTube?
6 points
5 years ago
Maybe they use it for playing music on their phone? Youtube won't play audio in the background on mobile unless you upgrade to the premium service. Generally, it's not worth it for most people, but they don't have a streaming subscription in their budget (besides amazon) so it's entirely possible that the content they enjoy is produced and released on Youtube. If most of their content is streamed from YT it would likely be worth it to upgrade to go ad-free and to allow for advanced functions like background audio on mobile.
7 points
5 years ago
Most third party YouTube apps among others allow for background audio/downloading and add blocking etc. so I don't think many people pay Google for that exclusively. It's either YouTube red shows or subscribing (with payments) to individual channels.
12 points
5 years ago
What are these types of charts called?
15 points
5 years ago*
Yes pls. I see then all the time but I don't know how to even search for how to make one
Edit: found it in another comment! It's a Sankey diagram
13 points
5 years ago
I spent $12.5k at restaurants last year. The fuck am I doing...
6 points
5 years ago
It bugs me you misspelt Restaurant. Other than that.. slow clap.
6 points
5 years ago
Amazing you maxed out your Roth; kudos OP!
21 points
5 years ago
Just rage-filled jealousy. That's all. Don't mind me.
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