Let me get straight to the point: I earn $5,000 a month, but after taxes, I only have $4,000 left. Mortgage, car loan, insurance, and utilities alone take up $3,700. The remaining $300 isn’t even enough for food. This isn’t living; it’s a survival game!

I work in New Jersey, earning $60,000 a year. Sounds like a lot, right? But after federal tax, state tax, and Social Security/Health insurance deductions, I only get a little over $4,000 a month. I want to live in a safe neighborhood, with my child in a good school district, but rent starts at least $2,800. Even sharing a basement apartment costs over $500, plus poor ventilation and cockroaches. Buying a house? Don’t be ridiculous. House prices have risen by 15% in the past two years, and property taxes have doubled. My friends in Florida were forced to move because of the taxes. My current apartment rents for $2,600 a month, which is already a “value for money” that I’ve managed to save up.

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My used Toyota costs $300 a month on loan, $200 for insurance, $150 for gas, and $2,000 a year for maintenance, averaging nearly $200 a month. In winter, a heavy snowfall breaks the windshield wipers, costing $80 to replace; a punctured tire requires patching and balancing, another $120. Not to mention parking fees, traffic tickets…

Electricity starts at $150 a month, skyrocketing to $400 in the summer with the air conditioning on. Natural gas heating costs over $200 a month in winter. Water, garbage disposal, internet (100 Mbps broadband $60), and cell phone bills (four unlimited data plans $180)—these fixed expenses easily exceed $1,000.

I’ve cut all these “extra expenses,” but the cost of living still leaves me breathless. No wonder some say the American Dream is dead, because ordinary people simply can’t afford it.

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