Signs someone grew up rich

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Idk but my boyfriend went to boarding school and I just went to regular private school and he's always pointing out shit I do that indicates I'm not as elite as him. I'll sticky this thread so that next time he does it I can let you guys know.


Like what kind of stuff does he point out? Could be pertinent to this discussion.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They are likely bad to average tippers.

Meaning that they do not “get” how the struggle is real for some since they have not personally experienced it.

It seems the people who have less tend to give more.

Also, they may think anyone working in a domestic situation in their home is simply “the hired help.”

Just my personal experience. 🤷🏻


This is new money not old money in my experience.


Bad tipping is old money in my experience. New money wants people to know they're rich. Old money doesn't care and is penny pinching.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:I grew up with money and definitely lacked the understanding that everyone did not go to college or vote when they turned 18. I began to understand this when I was 17 in 2000 and had conversations with classmates who were eligible to vote but didn’t in the 2000 presidential election. I went to “elite” private schools through 10th grade when I rebelled and told my parents that I refused to go back to the school I was at because it was full of terrible bullies and drug addicts. I finally convinced them to let me attend a large public high school and it was extremely eye-opening.
I was raised to know how to behave in any social situation. I attended a state dinner in my mothers place and an inaugural ball when I was 14. I was raised to participate in volunteer work from a young age and my family is on the board of a number of organizations. In my 20s and early 30s I have been asked to participate in high level volunteer positions in elite institutions, which has lead to board service at several of them. I’m by far the youngest board member in those cases.
We had a nanny/housekeeper and a pt gardener when I was a child and both were treated like members of the family. I was taught to cook (by my mom, who had learned from her parent’s chef), and how to clean and do laundry properly. My parents definitely instilled a work ethic in me, I worked all through high school and college though I didn’t “need” to, and now I work although my husband’s the primary “breadwinner”. I’m also the principle parent for our children and make sure that I’m able to spend quality time with them daily.
I can ride a horse well, sail, pilot a plane (though haven’t in years), play tennis & squash, whip up a soufflé, speak 2 languages fluently in addition to English, set up a campsite, appraise art, navigate my way through any place and plan a dinner party to perfection.


Sure they were. People always say this and it's so tone-deaf.


Not if it’s true. Our housekeeper lived with my parents when she retired, they nursed her and even hired full time care for her when she needed it. I consider her a second grandmother (one of my grandmothers was dead before I was born).
Our gardener wanted to move back to Mexico after he had a family. My parents gave him enough money to buy property and build a house. He now runs a successful b&b and has visited us many times. His children both went to college; one is now a teacher and the other in medical school.


Sorry, I don’t believe you. Your parents were so busy, successful, and important that they did not have the time to wipe your butt when you were a a baby, but they “nursed” the faithful old retainer in her dotage? GMAFB.


DP. Of course they didn't do that, but they paid someone else to. Becoming a lifelong employee to a very wealthy family is a good gig. If you don't understand that, well...says something


This is exactly the kind of statement that makes people doubt any good intentions when it comes to the rich. What does it "say"?

Rich people convince themselves they are superior and more deserving. Otherwise, how could you look in the mirror in the morning when so many people in the world are suffering and you waste so much on yourselves? No "manners" can shield the fact that you believe yourselves to be the "elite" instead of just some lucky slob who has a lot of money. Those lucky, lucky people who serve you day in and day out, so that you don't have to get your hands dirty. Vomit.


It says you aren't really rich so you don't know. If you read any good/bad qualifiers into that that is on you. It isn't a positive or a negative it just IS.



Not PP but IMO not necessarily - the last country we lived in, everyone had “help” although the locals and some expats from countries where domestic staff are not respected gave them demeaning names like “maid” “yard boy” etc. We called our staff, staff, and treated them as such. Many of them had worked for the local elite rich or foreigner business elite for their entire lives and lived in hovels on the premises, but had been treated as subhuman. The local families in our social circles were nearly always far richer than us. They often (but not always) worked their domestic staff from 6 am the morning until late at night, often without breaks, paid next to nothing, and offered no perks such as paying for the modest education of their staff’s children.

We told our staff that it is just a job, and we wanted them to enjoy their work. We would train them so it would be easier for them to find decent paying work when we left in a few years. We paid for to take driving and cooking classes, which was of course wonderful for us, and they were excited to learn new skills from professionals. We paid for their children’s schooling (although public school was in theory free, the tuition taxes, text books and uniforms added up to often insurmountable costs for them. We paid them much more than what they had earned before and slashed their hours to 8-4 with a lunch break. I also created a library for them to read and study in their free time. I told them I expected them to work hard during the set hours and then they should go and do whatever they need to for their own families. They worked extremely efficiently for us, and they were all nice to each other (house staff, gardener/ driver and guards). The houses where staff were treated with disrespect had a lot more disfunction and staff coming and going (many complained about that anyway). Our staff all found work after we left that was better than what they had had before with wealthy bosses.

That situation was of course very different to labor laws and experiences in the US, but even here, we pay our weekly house cleaner way above the minimum wage, provide transport and bonuses plus try to show respect for her. She has worked for us for many years and does excellent work.

It is fairly obvious to me that so much in life is just luck - many people from disadvantaged backgrounds are whip smart and with the right breaks in life they would have gone much further.

Whether you are wealthy or not, or somewhere in between like many of us in DMV, it pays to treat people who work for you with respect and kindness.



THis is interesting. I am writing this after having a break coffee with my "house staff", and I asked her what she tells people she does for a lviing. She says she's a maid. (although she did look at me like I'm an idiot for not knowing, so I had to explain why I asked).

I personally don't think there is anything demeaning about maid either. Yard boy definitely is, but nothing wrong with gardener.


It was the way they were treated like modern slaves that was demeaning. We wanted them to know we regarded them as people, not as servants. Many people there used that term as well.

Yes gardener is fine but yard boy is not especially when they gardener was similar age to me.


You are making a nonexistent distinction. A servant is a person who performs duties for others, especially a person employed in a house on domestic duties or as a personal attendant. They were servants. It has nothing to do with whether or not you treated them well or as people. They were still servants.


By that definition just about all people earning wages are servants …

They are people with feelings and dreams. They are more than their jobs.


Everyone who works for wages has a job title. I do. Maid is the job title for that particular role.



I get to decide the job title for my house staff and it is not maid or servant.
Anonymous

They are much more likely to leave millions to their designer pup or Siamese cat.

https://www.everplans.com/articles/the-10-biggest-inheritances-ever-left-to-pets
Anonymous
A 4-year-old stray cat that was rescued from the streets of Rome has inherited a $13 million fortune from its owner, the wealthy widow of an Italian property tycoon. Maria Assunta left the fortune to her beloved kitty Tommaso when she died two weeks ago at the age of 94.Dec 12, 2011
http://abcnews.go.com › 2011/12
Woman Leaves $13M Fortune to Pet Cat - ABC News
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They are likely bad to average tippers.

Meaning that they do not “get” how the struggle is real for some since they have not personally experienced it.

It seems the people who have less tend to give more.

Also, they may think anyone working in a domestic situation in their home is simply “the hired help.”

Just my personal experience. 🤷🏻


This is new money not old money in my experience.


Bad tipping is old money in my experience. New money wants people to know they're rich. Old money doesn't care and is penny pinching.


WRONG. New money is flashy cars and logos, cheap tippers. Old money will pull up in old, modest car like Ford or Toyota and be generous.
Anonymous
They just do not care what others think, can do what they want when they want to and have an incredible safety net so there really is no reason to stress about anything.
Anonymous
I have 7 mil, 3 homes, a nice trust and a Bal Harbour condo worth a ton when my Dad passes as well as more in stocks options. I roll around in my late brother's 2004 Honda Accord and could give a darn about impressing anyone. I know no one will ever believe me if I told them. They are already flabbergasted I own 3 houses in Clarksburg that I rent out and live in one that I absolutely love. I am just thankful to be alive and love surprising people with nice gifts and sweet treats from time to time.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They are likely bad to average tippers.

Meaning that they do not “get” how the struggle is real for some since they have not personally experienced it.

It seems the people who have less tend to give more.

Also, they may think anyone working in a domestic situation in their home is simply “the hired help.”

Just my personal experience. 🤷🏻


This is new money not old money in my experience.


Bad tipping is old money in my experience. New money wants people to know they're rich. Old money doesn't care and is penny pinching.


WRONG. New money is flashy cars and logos, cheap tippers. Old money will pull up in old, modest car like Ford or Toyota and be generous.


Well since I'm literally speaking from my personal experience, I'm not wrong. My experience is that new money wants everyone to know they're rich, including waitstaff and anyone who peaks at the receipt. Old money will calculate out exactly 18% pre-tax.
Anonymous
They post Facebook pictures of old relations from the 1890s, showing much finery (ie, buttons galore).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I have 7 mil, 3 homes, a nice trust and a Bal Harbour condo worth a ton when my Dad passes as well as more in stocks options. I roll around in my late brother's 2004 Honda Accord and could give a darn about impressing anyone. I know no one will ever believe me if I told them. They are already flabbergasted I own 3 houses in Clarksburg that I rent out and live in one that I absolutely love. I am just thankful to be alive and love surprising people with nice gifts and sweet treats from time to time.


Only 7m? You’re not rich.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have 7 mil, 3 homes, a nice trust and a Bal Harbour condo worth a ton when my Dad passes as well as more in stocks options. I roll around in my late brother's 2004 Honda Accord and could give a darn about impressing anyone. I know no one will ever believe me if I told them. They are already flabbergasted I own 3 houses in Clarksburg that I rent out and live in one that I absolutely love. I am just thankful to be alive and love surprising people with nice gifts and sweet treats from time to time.


Only 7m? You’re not rich.


He or she is rich and they sound like a very nice person to boot.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Clear, articulate speech with an expansive vocabulary.


LOL. I scored a 162 on the verbal comprehension portion of the (proctored, valid) IQ test I had to take for a neuropsychological exam last year (return to work after concussion). My parents were working class, but they cared about reading.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:"Money can't buy you claaaaaasss" lol name that tune


Said the countess
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I have 7 mil, 3 homes, a nice trust and a Bal Harbour condo worth a ton when my Dad passes as well as more in stocks options. I roll around in my late brother's 2004 Honda Accord and could give a darn about impressing anyone. I know no one will ever believe me if I told them. They are already flabbergasted I own 3 houses in Clarksburg that I rent out and live in one that I absolutely love. I am just thankful to be alive and love surprising people with nice gifts and sweet treats from time to time.


“Couldn’t” give a darn.

I will inherit nothing but I did learn how to speak and write properly.
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