Budget

In 2007, I had quit my job and was living off of savings.

Jacob had gone back to school and was living off of student loans.

Only Mike was gainfully employed.

Moreover, the value of the US dollar (vs. the Euro) had been decreasing since 2005 and, by the time we started our trip, it had reached an all-time low. We joked about this, but it wasn't that funny.

It was understood that we were backpacking through Europe on a budget and saving money where we could. Being on a budget would make our trip more like the movie EuroTrip anyway.

We found out early on that McDonald's was running a special across the EU: one hamburger for one euro. (Or one Egg McMuffin, depending on the time of day.) We decided to eat at McDonald's when we could, and put the savings towards meals at more expensive local restaurants that we otherwise wouldn't have gone to.

Getting a drip coffee at Starbucks was usually half the price of getting an Americano at a local sit-down cafe, too.

If you said that we traveled to Europe to eat McDonald's and drink Starbucks, you wouldn't be completely wrong.

If we had to pay for something, one person usually paid, with the understanding that we would pay him back later. We recorded these expenses on "The List," which was a sheet of notebook paper that we updated (according to the receipts we had kept) every day or two. "Put it on The List" is something that we frequently said to each other.

After we got back home, we tried to square The List with the withdraws we had made from our bank accounts, and The List was about $800 short. We had a heated argument about who owed what to whom. This was done over e-mail and lasted almost a week.

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