Anonymous wrote:First, truly upper class people know that you’re no competition. Their assured success for themselves and their offspring have nothing to do with you. So they can be gracious with you.
Middle-class people are clowns. They are truck drivers and secretaries, or maybe they are Feds destined to max out at GS-12. They think you’re supposed to follow the Golden Rule rather than assessing whether the other person is worthy.
UMCs have attained success but know it’s tenuous. After all, this is America. So yeah, I’ll coach your kid, but mine will pitch and play shortstop. Unless of course your FIL is GC at a corporation that could lock in my partnership if I bring their business. Then my kid will play 3b or 2b, pitch #2, and play short when yours pitches.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my experience UMC people focus mostly on status and money so they tend to connect only with people they consider ‘the right crowd’, people with similar status or people that can provide connections in those circles.
MC people are more focused on daily struggles and tend to sympathize more with other people because they know life can be hard and often is enough getting very sick or being layoff to end up in a time of hardship
Yup. It’s pretty clear in my UNW neighborhood that once neighbors know what I do and then guess how much I make and how much power I don’t have they have pretty immediately relegated me to being just the neighbor they say “hi” to when our paths cross. They suck. I’m smarter than most of them.
Why would you being smarter than them mean they should want to be your friend? That's a weird complaint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my experience UMC people focus mostly on status and money so they tend to connect only with people they consider ‘the right crowd’, people with similar status or people that can provide connections in those circles.
MC people are more focused on daily struggles and tend to sympathize more with other people because they know life can be hard and often is enough getting very sick or being layoff to end up in a time of hardship
Yup. It’s pretty clear in my UNW neighborhood that once neighbors know what I do and then guess how much I make and how much power I don’t have they have pretty immediately relegated me to being just the neighbor they say “hi” to when our paths cross. They suck. I’m smarter than most of them.
Anonymous wrote:I have come across this interesting phenomenon where the UMC young professionals I come across in their twenties and thirties are sort of cold and aloof. They aren’t very friendly and do not go out of their way to befriend you.
In comparison middle class people are so warm and friendly. As are the upper class people.
Why do you think this is?
Anonymous wrote:In my experience UMC people focus mostly on status and money so they tend to connect only with people they consider ‘the right crowd’, people with similar status or people that can provide connections in those circles.
MC people are more focused on daily struggles and tend to sympathize more with other people because they know life can be hard and often is enough getting very sick or being layoff to end up in a time of hardship