Anonymous wrote:I guess you could say we are in an enviable situation...I have a high earning husband which allows me to work PT at a meaningful job that pays relatively well. We have a FT nanny, and never max out her hours, but keep her FT for sick days, school vacations, etc since both of us have somewhat irregular work hours. My husband is a very hands on dad, and we are fortunate enough to send our kids to private and have vacation homes in desireable locations.
My question is—would you be less likely to befriend people with “more money?” We like to spend time with family and friends, and definitely value experiences over possessions, but obviously these are not mutually exclusive. We have lots of good friends from when we were younger (eg. when no one had money!), but I’m finding it harder to make new friends as a relatively new parent of a preschooler.
Is it just harder to make good friends at this stage? Can having a lot of “stuff” be an obstacle to new friendships? FWIW, we may not be super outgoing, but overall are pretty laid back and friendly.
Anonymous wrote:I guess you could say we are in an enviable situation...I have a high earning husband which allows me to work PT at a meaningful job that pays relatively well. We have a FT nanny, and never max out her hours, but keep her FT for sick days, school vacations, etc since both of us have somewhat irregular work hours. My husband is a very hands on dad, and we are fortunate enough to send our kids to private and have vacation homes in desireable locations.
My question is—would you be less likely to befriend people with “more money?” We like to spend time with family and friends, and definitely value experiences over possessions, but obviously these are not mutually exclusive. We have lots of good friends from when we were younger (eg. when no one had money!), but I’m finding it harder to make new friends as a relatively new parent of a preschooler.
Is it just harder to make good friends at this stage? Can having a lot of “stuff” be an obstacle to new friendships? FWIW, we may not be super outgoing, but overall are pretty laid back and friendly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last time I checked, we were still in America. Money makes so many things easier.
But *too much* money makes so many things harder. You have to find the sweet spot.
+1
We've found that sweet spot. I SAH, my DH has a super flexible schedule, we have a nanny, my mom lives with us, our kids go to private school and our marriage is genuinely strong. We take 4-6 vacations a year, we donate time and money to charity, and our kids are happy/healthy. I'm terrified at how happy we are and am always waiting for the other shoe to drop.
But you cannot, with all that, acquire tact, apparently.
Np- what about this post lacks tact?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last time I checked, we were still in America. Money makes so many things easier.
But *too much* money makes so many things harder. You have to find the sweet spot.
+1
We've found that sweet spot. I SAH, my DH has a super flexible schedule, we have a nanny, my mom lives with us, our kids go to private school and our marriage is genuinely strong. We take 4-6 vacations a year, we donate time and money to charity, and our kids are happy/healthy. I'm terrified at how happy we are and am always waiting for the other shoe to drop.
But you cannot, with all that, acquire tact, apparently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are the wealthy moms posting about their wealth in this thread? Money can buy a lot of things but apparently not class.
Yep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last time I checked, we were still in America. Money makes so many things easier.
But *too much* money makes so many things harder. You have to find the sweet spot.
+1
We've found that sweet spot. I SAH, my DH has a super flexible schedule, we have a nanny, my mom lives with us, our kids go to private school and our marriage is genuinely strong. We take 4-6 vacations a year, we donate time and money to charity, and our kids are happy/healthy. I'm terrified at how happy we are and am always waiting for the other shoe to drop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last time I checked, we were still in America. Money makes so many things easier.
But *too much* money makes so many things harder. You have to find the sweet spot.
Anonymous wrote:Why are the wealthy moms posting about their wealth in this thread? Money can buy a lot of things but apparently not class.
Anonymous wrote:Nah I'm pretty happy with what we have. HHI ~ 700k + reasonable work hours (50ish).
I wish we were more connected though. I worry about their chances of getting into "good" colleges.
Anonymous wrote:My husband is a physician, so we can afford what we need and much of what we want. The thing is, I don't really want a bunch of nannies and household help in my personal space helping me out. I want my own husband to be home more often so he can help me raise our kids like I thought he would when we got married.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. I know too many kids who are being raised by nannies and it’s not pretty.
You can be a rich SAHM with a nanny just to give a hand. That is what I would love!!
I am a rich SAHM with a trust-fund from my biological maternal grandmother, and I outsource as much as I can (except childcare) for three households - ours, ILs and parents. ILs and parents live close to us and we want them to be able to spend quality family time with us, take care of their health and not be stressed about doing routine stuff in their homes. We have put in place a cleaning service, yard maintenance, handyman, cooking/prep person, yoga instructor and a masseuse for our parents. They are pretty healthy and active people, financially stable, fiscally responsible, who are retired and maybe do not need all the help that we give them now, but, we want to make sure that we have thought through everything that can make their lives easier and healthier so that they spend more time with us and our kids. I think services that buys you more time with your family is a great use of money. For our income, we are pretty average materially (homes, cars, clothes). Our money is spent on less visible things like - organic food, vacations, hobbies, staffing. In another 10-15 years, if we see the need we will also hire a part-time chauffeur/attendant for them.