Or watched German reality tv - it's worse than ours and I can't understand German. |
| This wins for the stupidest thread ever started on DCUM. |
My husband and I were raised in the same manner, and he would attend the symphony with me if I asked him, but I would never dream of asking him because he would be bored out of his mind and just go to please me. Seems that your problem isnt socio-economic background, but rather divergent interests. |
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I think a lot of you are blaming socioeconomic differences for things that are really just normal differences between families and personalities.
Not everyone who grew up in an upper-middle class family likes the symphony. I know I don't. I also think that a 3 carat diamond ring is a waste of money and extremely gaudy. So again, people are different. |
| No, and after seeing my middle class friend marry a man from a working class/poor background, I wouldn't. Causes so many problems for them. He's very cheap and thinks she's very extravagant. |
My mom married "down," and they fought over things like whether it was worth it to send the kids to top private universities. My dad thought that our (mediocre) state university was just fine; my mom insisted that it was worth the tuition (all three children were accepted into top 20 universities). My mom won out. They are now divorced. |
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Dated a guy from a poor/working class background. There were ways I thought our families were just different. Then I read a book called Worlds of Pain about working class families and I realized that some of those differences were class differences. It was humbling.
Unfortunately I don't have any good advice for you, OP. Good luck! |
| Kind of. IL family is prob from a bit of a lower class (I hate to say this) but it's weird how this affects our spending habits. For example, I'd say my family is more the "millionaire next door" type. Like, we have lots of $$ in bank, went to good schools, etc. but otherwise are very abstemious, frugal, etc. Don't get wowed by name brands, aren't out to impress, don't drive flashy cars, but the cars we have are fully paid for right off the lot, etc. IL family -- more status-conscious imho. Ask me all the time about what schools I am looking into for DD; I shrug this off. They live, everyday, much "higher on the hog" but scraped by to send the kids to state school, whereas we went to private. Must buy name brands in stores. Spends loads of $$ on food. Things like this. It's just different. |
OMG. Post of the day!
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OP, it really would be helpful if you would explain more what you're looking for when you return. What problems are you seeing?
I grew up solidly lower middle class, and my ILs have lots of money. This manifests in a number of ways in our relationship: I feel constantly insecure about money and am very frugal (thus annoying my husband), my husband has difficulty relating to and fitting in with my family, I can embarrass his parents by not understanding how to dress for certain occasions, we have different perspectives on the importance of our children attending private or "top" schools and colleges, our ideas of a good vacation are vastly different ... I definitely think these differences make our relationship more difficult than it would be if we came from the same background. I think we nonetheless have a healthy relationship because of the underlying respect and willingness to compromise. In some ways, I do still think my marriage is an anthropological experiment some times; interesting new things crop up all the time. |
I know a few, as well. They would not consider anyone even slightly below their SES. One is a doctor and would only consider another doctor, or someone with a PhD, and with a 6-figure salary (college degree is not enough, regardless of income). She's in her late 30s, wants kids, but says she cannot possibly see herself with someone earning less than her. |
| I was raised blue collar lower middle class. We used china At holidays, went to top private schools and know how to dress. Some of these stereotypes are offensive. I also dont really understand OP's issues. Sounds more like divergent interests.... Without more information it is hard to give advice. |
| OP posted originally in 2011. |
I dunno. Currently in the running are "Gucci vs. Prada beach bag?" and "Do you wear a watch?" I'm hoping all three are jokes. |
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Class issues can be really hard. Unlike race and culture, they are less well understood. You know that if you are marrying someone from another country there are going to be differences and you are prepare to manage them. With class, the cultural differences are less obvious and the expectations can be different. That makes it harder to deal with in relationships.
Have you read, Limbo: Blue Collar Roots, White Collar Dreams, OP? It may not be entirely applicable to your situation because its about people who start blue collar and become white collar. But one of the things the book shines at doing is explaining the differences between blue and white collar culture. When you understand what the values are and how they can actually be productive in certain circumstances and not in others (this is true for both blue and white collar culture) it makes it a lot easier to understand some of the behaviors that may seem foreign or even counterproductive. Anyway, as to you original question, no, I did not marry out of my class. I married someone who started very, very poor and is self-made, just like me. Although I have been white collar for many years, I could not maintain romantic relationships with the white collar guys I would meet in my social circles. Most of them weren't interested in me because I didn't have the right pedigree or a daddy with money, and I wasn't interested in anyone who lived off anyone elses' accomplishments or who couldn't hold his own and appreciate my blue collar relatives and friends. For me, that gulf was just too wide. But, it's nothing short of miraculous that I was able to meet someone who has traveled the same road I have. Seriously, miracle. Short of that, I'd say you should try to understand the culture and the differences. It will help you appreciate the stuff you don't understand now. |