To each their own. We went to Charlottesville for 1 day to check out UVA and Monticello. My son did not like UVA or Charlottesville. We have friends who moved to similar places like Roanoke or areas where they could buy a lot of land. They love it. It is so far from a major airport. |
I was thinking this but didn’t write it. We are a minority and this would not appeal to us. Living in an area with lots of diversity is important to us. We like being in or near a major city. |
I don't live in Charlottesville so I don't have a dog in this fight but you went there for ONE DAY and decided the entire city wasn't for you? Ok. I have multiple friends who live there and love it. That's fine if you don't want to live there, but to judge an entire city after being there for a day is very small minded. |
I think it’s ok to decide a city/town after a day especially if you’re already well travelled. That’s the reason I choose to live in urban areas. So many experiences of traveling to smaller and rural parts of the country and being treated so different depending on whether my white husband was with me or not. Im well traveled and there’s something unsettling about being treated like a foreigner in your own country. I mean moving to a rural area or some parts of the U.S. will likely feel as jarring as moving abroad. |
nobody is going to suffer socially because they are wearing $400 boots instead of $180. |
it is absolutely possible to afford some luxuries on $300k. you can travel internationally - but not three times a year. you can go to Starbucks but not twice a day. you can be nice furniture, but not every month. etc. etc. it's ok to indulge oneself on occasion and to teach your kids the same. |
Both are bad. Va Beach and Newport News are in the same tidewater region. You definitely would not want your kids going to public for K-12 there. It’s a race to the bottom. This based on personal experience. |
Again I think kids nowadays are not making fun of other kids for not having trendy stuff. The preppy/popular kids are into trendy stuff but that they not making fun of kids in the hallway for not wearing Lululemon. Maybe the dynamic is different *within* the popular group? But honestly I wouldn't want my kids to be part of any group that is dissing kids for their clothes. You sound like you need to work on some stuff. I was made fun for different things growing up but I am not going to let that guide my parenting. |
My kids are doing K-12 in the Tidewater region and they’re not racing to the bottom. They’ll get into the same colleges many of your kids will and they’re having happy, well-adjusted childhoods along the way, free from travel sports and Lululemon. |
I live in Norfolk and my kids go to private so I'm not overly offended by what you said but plenty of the parents at my kids' school went to public school in VA Beach and I'd say they're doing just fine based on their jobs/houses/etc. |
For minorities and people of color, going to an area where it is majority white would not be preferred. We are a minority. My husband got an offer in an area that felt like it was 99.9% white. Schools were good. My husband was offered $1m+ and we declined because that was not the type of environment I wanted for my minority children. We have white friends who love this area and would have thought this offer would be amazing. They are white and not minorities. |
My older kids are boys and I have an elementary girl. I have heard of mean girl stories starting in upper elementary. Girls can be mean. They will be mean to fat girls, tall girls, any girls. I know my tween and teen boys don’t like to stand out. Their friends all dress similarly in joggers, athletic shorts and sweatshirts. I can’t imagine any of them caring if their pants are from old navy or Nike. Girls may care more. |
Confidence of child is key. I have 2 boys. My older son got my old iPhone. We were going to give our second son my husband’s old iPhone but our carrier said it was too old to hook up and gave him a free new iPhone. His one friend was over and saw that my son had a new iPhone and he seemed embarrassed of his old phone. I even said to the mom and boy the only reason he had the new phone was because it was free and the old one couldn’t be activated.
My older son still has my old phone and he really couldn’t care less. I don’t care either. My husband got me a new phone and I remember a few random people commented on my phone. I thought it was odd people even could tell. I guess the number of lenses is different. So those girls who have Lululemon or are confident anyways probably don’t care if your girl who can’t afford or have parents who don’t want to buy for them have the logo or not. It is more your daughter who feels insecure about it. Girls aren’t going around looking for this logo and teasing girls in the hallway about this. |
Lululemon has a style. It isn’t just the logo. The cuts are flattering. Hoodies are cute. They are good quality too. I have never had a pair that I had to throw out.
I also have alo, athleta, caqique?, under armor, Nike, etc. I do think I wear Lululemon the most. It is the most flattering. |
not that weird- actually quite common, especially here in DC in the non-profit world. younger gen x, older millennials grew up in a time of extreme affluence and peace, our single income immigrant parents could afford a really good life and the of us who didnt chase money or pay attention to it thought that similar choices would lead to similar outcomes and that just isn't true any longer. |