Nothing about this couple suggests affluence. His arms are covered with tattoos. They both appear shabbily dressed. Their speech doesn’t suggest much education. The car in which they arrived isn’t very new or impressive.
But as I watch them interact with each other and their son — who’s about 2 years old — I’m struck by how happy they seem to be as they eat together in this restaurant.
They both interact tenderly and lovingly with their son. When the man gets up to get a drink refill, he pauses to kiss the woman on the forehead — and she smiles in love.
I can’t know how much money they make, of course, but everything in my experience with such people suggests it wouldn’t be much. I’d be surprised if they made more than $40,000 combined. Maybe $50,000. I’m just guessing, of course.
But I’m thinking about this because of an article that NPR published today lamenting how difficult it can be to have enough money if you make $100,000 or more a year. It details the horrors of four individuals or families struggling with incomes of $100,000 or more.

Can we find peace online when social media have become toxic?
After years of wasting my life, sands of time are slipping away
In Colorado, these bureaucrats are taking ‘nanny state’ seriously
If you think world is about logic, you misunderstand human nature
Experimentation produces beauty that won’t come from slavishly following One True Way
Goodbye, William (1999-2015)
I want my children surrounded by tools of creation, not consumption
After his death, I can finally see good in narcissistic father again