Anonymous wrote:Seems like there are many people trying to look wealthier than they are. What are the tell-tale signs?
Anonymous wrote:I call it fronting. I live in a new neighborhood full of fronters. The neighborhood is under 10 years old and filled with custom built homes on very large lots. One of those hoods where people come and drive around looking at the homes. We live in a spec home. We bought at a time when new housing was in trouble. We got a fantastic deal on this house.
The majority of people living here grew up here and for some reason think this place means you made it. According to my nosy neighbor. Sometimes I think it's Darlie Routier creepy with the front yard fountains and the concrete lion statues. I am not kidding. And everyone has a boat, multiple cars, many have either RVs or campers, pools/hot tubs, outdoor kitchens. The manicured lawns, dry cleaning deliveries, UPS comes so often I think the same driver has this place as his only route.
From the outside looking in you would think everyone is living on Easy Street. Cue Darryl's Walking Dead torture song. HA HA. But once inside you find out it's far from the truth. My nosy neighbor loves to fill us in on everybody's business. The man gossips more than any woman I have ever known.
Their life I guess. We aren't followers. Never have been, never will be.
While everyone was busy fronting, we paid off our house. They brag about things, we silently sing to the heavens we are debt free. But I have seen foreclosure papers served on more than 1 home, the repo man coming for cars, utilities shut off. It's not the wealthy utopia some pretend it is. I really hate knowing this crap but I do need sunshine inside sometimes. I can't help it if I see things.
I don't really care. I only care about me and mine. It's not how we choose to live. And it is a choice.
Anonymous wrote:I call it fronting. I live in a new neighborhood full of fronters. The neighborhood is under 10 years old and filled with custom built homes on very large lots. One of those hoods where people come and drive around looking at the homes. We live in a spec home. We bought at a time when new housing was in trouble. We got a fantastic deal on this house.
The majority of people living here grew up here and for some reason think this place means you made it. According to my nosy neighbor. Sometimes I think it's Darlie Routier creepy with the front yard fountains and the concrete lion statues. I am not kidding. And everyone has a boat, multiple cars, many have either RVs or campers, pools/hot tubs, outdoor kitchens. The manicured lawns, dry cleaning deliveries, UPS comes so often I think the same driver has this place as his only route.
From the outside looking in you would think everyone is living on Easy Street. Cue Darryl's Walking Dead torture song. HA HA. But once inside you find out it's far from the truth. My nosy neighbor loves to fill us in on everybody's business. The man gossips more than any woman I have ever known.
Their life I guess. We aren't followers. Never have been, never will be.
While everyone was busy fronting, we paid off our house. They brag about things, we silently sing to the heavens we are debt free. But I have seen foreclosure papers served on more than 1 home, the repo man coming for cars, utilities shut off. It's not the wealthy utopia some pretend it is. I really hate knowing this crap but I do need sunshine inside sometimes. I can't help it if I see things.
I don't really care. I only care about me and mine. It's not how we choose to live. And it is a choice.
Anonymous wrote:I call it fronting. I live in a new neighborhood full of fronters. The neighborhood is under 10 years old and filled with custom built homes on very large lots. One of those hoods where people come and drive around looking at the homes. We live in a spec home. We bought at a time when new housing was in trouble. We got a fantastic deal on this house.
The majority of people living here grew up here and for some reason think this place means you made it. According to my nosy neighbor. Sometimes I think it's Darlie Routier creepy with the front yard fountains and the concrete lion statues. I am not kidding. And everyone has a boat, multiple cars, many have either RVs or campers, pools/hot tubs, outdoor kitchens. The manicured lawns, dry cleaning deliveries, UPS comes so often I think the same driver has this place as his only route.
From the outside looking in you would think everyone is living on Easy Street. Cue Darryl's Walking Dead torture song. HA HA. But once inside you find out it's far from the truth. My nosy neighbor loves to fill us in on everybody's business. The man gossips more than any woman I have ever known.
Their life I guess. We aren't followers. Never have been, never will be.
While everyone was busy fronting, we paid off our house. They brag about things, we silently sing to the heavens we are debt free. But I have seen foreclosure papers served on more than 1 home, the repo man coming for cars, utilities shut off. It's not the wealthy utopia some pretend it is. I really hate knowing this crap but I do need sunshine inside sometimes. I can't help it if I see things.
I don't really care. I only care about me and mine. It's not how we choose to live. And it is a choice.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like there are many people trying to look wealthier than they are. What are the tell-tale signs?
Anonymous wrote:Seems like there are many people trying to look wealthier than they are. What are the tell-tale signs?
Anonymous wrote:Look, I live in Bethesda, know a lot of people with a variety of assets/income and no one is pretending to be anything they are not. A, they are too busy living their lives. B, why would they care what they project?
It's a question of personal preference, OP. Some like to wear flashy jewelry, drive flashy cars, mortgage themselves to the hilt for their large house. Others drive battered old Toyotas, wear down-at-heel things, and still live in their starter home from the 1920s. They may have exactly the same money, they just have a different way of enjoying their life.
And that's fine. How boring would the world be if we all thought alike!
Anonymous wrote:Look, I live in Bethesda, know a lot of people with a variety of assets/income and no one is pretending to be anything they are not. A, they are too busy living their lives. B, why would they care what they project?
It's a question of personal preference, OP. Some like to wear flashy jewelry, drive flashy cars, mortgage themselves to the hilt for their large house. Others drive battered old Toyotas, wear down-at-heel things, and still live in their starter home from the 1920s. They may have exactly the same money, they just have a different way of enjoying their life.
And that's fine. How boring would the world be if we all thought alike!