Here's a very 2025 problem: you save up for something you want, you can actually afford it, you buy it responsibly, and then you lie awake at night wondering if you've made a catastrophic financial mistake. Welcome to millennial spending anxiety, where even a gaming PC becomes an existential crisis.
A Reddit user recently laid bare this exact dilemma in r/MiddleClassFinance. They'd worked extra hours, saved diligently, and finally built the PC they wanted. But instead of enjoying it, they were drowning in guilt.
"I intentionally took the extra work to build a PC," they wrote. "But now that I have it, I just feel guilty spending it."
The Weight of Every Dollar
The post struck a nerve. Hundreds of commenters chimed in with their own versions of the same struggle: the paralyzing sense that every purchase might be the wrong one, that every dollar not saved is a future disaster in the making.
One commenter shared a sobering story that reframed the whole debate. "My best friend two years ago was a big saver," they wrote. "Never bought a new car... didn't travel because they were waiting to get a little older to travel. Got a brain tumor, passed away in two months."
That kind of reality check appeared throughout the thread. Another person noted, "You made $90K, you can afford a $3K PC. I'm not saying now... but if it's that important to you, you'll find a way."
But knowing you can afford something and feeling okay about buying it are apparently two very different things. As one person put it plainly: "Buddy, I feel guilty spending money on anything."
This isn't just individual neurosis. It's a generational pattern. Millennials in their late 20s to early 40s are finally earning decent money after years of student debt, recession recovery, and wage stagnation. But the psychological scars run deep. The habit of scarcity persists even when the scarcity itself has eased. Every purchase feels like it could tip you back into financial chaos.
When Responsibility Becomes Paralysis
Here's what makes this case particularly interesting: the original poster had done everything right. They'd maxed out their Roth IRA, fully funded their health savings account, and put the PC on a 0% APR credit card. By any reasonable standard, they were being financially responsible.
And yet the guilt remained. Should that money go toward a future car instead? Into a high-yield savings account? Somewhere, anywhere other than something that brings them joy right now?
The financial advice in the thread was surprisingly consistent. "Put 15% in retirement. And live your life," one person wrote. Another added, "This will not derail you from achieving your long term goals by any way or form. Spend that money."
Some commenters got creative with the math to ease the guilt. One person calculated the cost per hour of entertainment: "That's $2.16/hr of entertainment. Over 5 years, that's $490 per year. Some people's bar tab is that in a month."
Not everyone was entirely sympathetic, though. "You got priorities messed up. A PC doesn't transport you to work," someone pointed out, reminding the poster to also plan for big-ticket necessities like replacing their car.




