An Actual Financial Misstep

Some personal finance blogs (and by “some” we mean “all but these“) are nothing but chronicles of the authors’ bad financial decisions. Fortunately for them, they’ll never run out of material. Unfortunately for them, they’ll never get out of debt and don’t really want to. Meanwhile, we sit here from our relatively affluent perch, laughing at their foolishness and patting ourselves on the back for being so savvy.

We’re not perfect, it only seems that way. Case in point, last week we went to the Capital Grille. What a mistake.

If you’re unfamiliar, Capital Grille is one of those chain restaurants whose each location makes an effort to have you believe it’s not a chain restaurant. It’s an upscale steak joint, but not so upscale that they’ll turn you away for wearing shorts. The hostess wears a formal pantsuit, there’s a guy in a blazer who stands next to her and wears an earpiece, and everything is cherrywood and superfluous cutlery. But Capital Grille is still a subsidiary of the same company that owns Olive Garden and Red Lobster.

Maybe once or twice a year, your hosts splurge and eat somewhere expensive, and even that’s too many. The only reasons we went to the Capital Grille this particular night were a) we were going to be in its neighborhood anyway and b) American Express had sent us a $50 no-strings-attached gift card. That we used it makes us the betting favorites for next month’s RoTM award.

The rationale went something like this. “$50, that’s $25 apiece. How much more than that can an entrée be? We’ll end up enjoying a fancy steak dinner for like $10 each.”

Two steaks, a salad for one of us, and two shareable side dishes (green beans and pommes frites, and good God that’s a pretentious way of saying french fries.) Neither of us drink. So…total with tax and tip, including the discount?

$112. 

Not to go Trent Hamm on you, but we felt dirty. We could have had more fulfilling, more flavorful and healthier burritos at Qdoba for $7 apiece, and would have if we had the night to live over again. Our distaff half even said afterwards, “This is stupid. Let’s never do this again.”

Thank God our tastes are normally cheap. That Qdoba date is next on our list, assuming we can take enough time away from buying our groceries at Winco and flying coach to do so. However, we have plenty of friends – you probably have a couple too – who spend money like this as a matter of course. Maybe not on overpriced food, but on overpriced alcohol or overpriced mood alterers or vehicle rustproofing or something.

Our evening made us wonder if people really enjoy fancy dining, or if it’s just a rite that people adhere to unthinkingly. Most of our fellow diners appeared to be on business. A couple groups of 12, one group of 20, all obviously from overseas and all probably enjoying expense accounts. Plus they were visiting a city where financial recklessness is practically a requisite for entering.

Again, opportunity cost. That $112 could have gone to countless better places. We’re not agonizing over this; we can afford to drop $112 in a night and not worry about how we’re going to pay the power bill. But it’s just such a freaking waste. For an experience that lasted about 45 minutes, and that required us to wear clothes significantly less comfortable than what we usually wear.

The moral? Spend $112 on a hotel room if you know it’s going to be much more comfortable and cleaner than the $40 fleabag palace across town. Spend $112 on music, books or ski equipment that you know you’ll enjoy over and over again, as opposed to going without them. But $112 to keep yourself nourished for a few more hours, when you could do so for far less? Lunacy.

A dumb and/or rationalizing person would say “Hey, you only live once” and add the $112 to his credit card balance. (Oh, who are we kidding? His bill would be closer to $200 with wine and maybe dessert.) Then he’d try to win it back at the tables, fail, and go to the “Hey, you only live once” defense again. Vegas, baby. Meanwhile, your authors will think nothing of spending thousands of dollars a month on a property manager to save us the trouble of having to deal with our rental housing tenants. We value our time.

If you’re not spending money to improve your life, to make your life easier, to free up time, or to get a greater return in the future, what the hell are you spending money for? Us squandering $112 was no different than that kook at The Simple Dollar blowing 5 hours making his own Pop-Tarts and toothpaste. Time is indeed money. Worst of all, the food wasn’t even that great. The steaks sat in our intestines like lead. Vegetables are meant to be blanched, not smothered in grease and heavy sauces. Steak belongs on a list with movies, Radiohead, nightclubs, New Year’s Eve, Derek Jeter, Shakespeare and kids as the most overrated things in the universe.

Your Time Is Worth Something

“Give up my seat? With pleasure!”

The other day, speaking with one of the few personal finance bloggers who doesn’t want to see us drawn, quartered, and fed to narwhals, we got on the topic of public transportation. (Alright, it was her. She’s a sweet gal: don’t hold it against her that she associates with us.) We each concluded that we’d rather crawl wherever we were going until our knees were bloodied and infected than get on a bus.

When you’re 11, riding a bus (solo, anyway) is awesome. You’re away from your parents, and you have the freedom that your 10-year-old sibling who’s stuck riding with mom and dad doesn’t yet enjoy. Sure, where you can travel is still limited (by the bus driver, the connecting routes, their schedules, your curfew), but if you’re plucky enough you could theoretically hop a Greyhound to Belize and start a new life. Even if you don’t, public transportation still beats the hell out of being stuck at home or in the passenger seat of your mom’s Scion.

But you know what happens? Most of us grow up. We want wheels of our own, giving us a new kind of autonomy that that 11-year-old bus rider can barely comprehend. Hopefully, you haven’t forgotten this yourself. Wherever you’re reading this, there’s nothing to stop you from getting in your car at 3 a.m. tomorrow and driving wherever you want to. That’s a liberty that most of us take for granted, so much so that we don’t even bother thinking about exercising it. “Are you crazy? I have to work that morning and I’d be dead tired. Can’t show up at the office groggy. What will people think? Besides, I was out late last night, almost 7 p.m.”

What does this have to do with money? Everything.

Those of us who drive do so because we like self-determination. It’s not that we necessarily like paying $4-something a gallon for gas, sitting in traffic, nor burning fossil fuels and turning the planet into a premature Venus. The last of those is irrelevant, and the first 2 aren’t even up for consideration. A car lets you go wherever you want, whenever you want. For that degree of freedom, $4 a gallon is an unbelievable bargain.

Most of us don’t live in Manhattan (thank God), Tokyo or Singapore. There’s no subway station outside the door. And even if there were, we’d still have to share it with people. You folks who think that riding public transportation is the greatest gift you can give to the planet short of buying carbon credits don’t know what you’re missing.

Did you know you can save $12,000 a year by not owning a car? Gas, insurance, repairs…

So you’re saying that for just $12,000 a year, I can come and go as I please? Have somewhere to store certain stuff as I run errands throughout the day? Keep warm in the winter and cool in the summer? Listen to music I like while going where I’m going, as loud as I want? Go on a roadtrip next weekend?  My God, cars are the most amazing deal ever. You just said so.

We’ve progressed pretty far as a species, but the fundamentals of off-roading via public transportation continue to elude us. Buses and subways traditionally steer clear of sand dunes, mountain passes and 4WD roads.

Transporting cargo. You know what you can do in an SUV that you can’t do on a bus? (No, aside from that. Grow up.) Go to the supermarket and buy a week’s worth of groceries, for one thing. How you central business district metropolitans can survive carless, and thus limited to the amount of groceries you can carry in your hands, is beyond us.

The only reason to take the bus is if you don’t value your time. Drive 20 minutes somewhere, or take an hour including multiple transfers to save a portion of that $12,000 a year…it’s up to you. Now if you’re a kid who’s too young to drive, your time is pretty worthless anyway. You still have decades ahead of you, which you can squander first by going to college, then by paying off student loans. Besides, if you’re under 16 you have no choice in the matter anyway.

Those of with places to go and people to see – you know, adult interests – realize there’s only an ever-diminishing finite time in which to get things done. Knowing that, why on Earth wouldn’t you do so as efficiently and quickly as possible?

An advanced city is not a place where the poor move about in cars, rather it’s where even the rich use public transportation.

– Enrique Peñalosa, former mayor of Bogota

The best part about pithy quotes? You don’t have to elaborate on them! Like the ones attributed to Einstein (World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones, if bees die out humans will follow them within 4 years, etc.) While losing nothing in the translation, the above Twitter-friendly sentence (8000 or something retweets) is simultaneously provocative, unexpected, and devoid of sense. Rich people don’t sacrifice autonomy and self-determination, neither to have a boss push them around nor to wait for a bus. That’s what makes them rich. 

The next time an idealistic idiot tells you that driving cars is a social ill, run him over. Driving and maintaining a car says that your time is yours to cherish and make the best use out of. Taking the bus says you’re poor, a manipulable automaton, or both.