Anonymous wrote:Those low class Bush and Kennedy families are so dumb for keeping oceanfront land in the family for generations. Don’t they know you can rent at a variety of places on Airbnb and stay in hotels?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP.
Just to be clear -- is someone really implying that you have to own a beach house to create good memories and a happy childhood for your children? Really, or am I misreading how the dichotomy is set up?
I'm not sure that people without beach houses are confined to mortgagor children. That's ... an odd take.
I assume people who did not grow up with access to family vacation homes don’t really understand, so it’s easy to be dismissive about the experiences, memories and traditions. A rental is not the same thing, not even close. And also, if you’re miserable and hate where you’re from or are estranged from family, it’s even easier to be dismissive about all of this.
Anonymous wrote:I'm so glad my parents have nothing to inherit except maybe debt.
My wife's side of the family is more well-off and I have seen some ugly disputes over land and property. Two brothers no longer speak. The family has to balance functions - if brother A came to Thanksgiving, brother B gets to come to Christmas, etc. So crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are some responses here that are certainly not classy.
It's interesting that what you have can mean more to some than how you behave.
Topics like are are a magnet for the miserable. The same personalities troll the private school forum.
Anonymous wrote:There are some responses here that are certainly not classy.
It's interesting that what you have can mean more to some than how you behave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP.
Just to be clear -- is someone really implying that you have to own a beach house to create good memories and a happy childhood for your children? Really, or am I misreading how the dichotomy is set up?
I'm not sure that people without beach houses are confined to mortgagor children. That's ... an odd take.
I assume people who did not grow up with access to family vacation homes don’t really understand, so it’s easy to be dismissive about the experiences, memories and traditions. A rental is not the same thing, not even close. And also, if you’re miserable and hate where you’re from or are estranged from family, it’s even easier to be dismissive about all of this.
You ... get that my family without a beach house head living and strong traditions, too? That gathering and shucking pecans with my grandmother, her hand on mine as we rolled out the poor dough, are cherished, right?
That our giant family reunions riverside -- without a beach house -- full of games and laughing cousins were amazing, chasing fireflies and my uncle playing the violin as dusk came down?
Do you admit that you, who did not experience it, don't really understand and find it easy to be dismissive of that?
It's there any way at all you can stretch your brain to understand that even, yes even!, someone in your social circle might have married into a family with different and cherished traditions, or even -- even! -- themselves remember and cherish something different from you? Any way at all?
Or is it really that just the wealth-related traditions that you happen to like are the only ones that count?
Are you just as prone to dismissing my experience because you did not share it?
Thank you for confirming the point that miserable serial posters like you are triggered about topics like this. You like to see UMC people like OP knocked down a peg or two. And you have zero grasp of wealth, land, inheritance and family estate planning.
DP here. I think other PP is trying to say that some random old beach rental, probably a different one every year, maybe on a highway, maybe not so close to the last, with some contrived name on the sign hung on the front of the house - maybe or maybe not in the same town as the year before - is not the same memories of even renting the same beach house, or a house on the same small street, each year. There is less memory making, if the house or area means little or nothing.
Not saying I agree, that is just how some people feel. For example, an obligatory week with the inlaws isn't always about memory making, but sometimes obligation to a family that would otherwise have something negative to say, whether or not you showed up. Sometimes the matriarch/patriarch of the family isn't so sweet or warm or welcoming or inclusive or pleasant or fun. Not every family is sweet or warm or welcoming or inclusive or pleasant or fun - not every family is the same, as you stated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those low class Bush and Kennedy families are so dumb for keeping oceanfront land in the family for generations. Don’t they know you can rent at a variety of places on Airbnb and stay in hotels?
LOL, how stupid is this? If you're not wealthy like the Bushes or Kennedys, you might not even be able to keep the house for two generations. WHICH IS WHAT HAPPENED TO OP. Nobody here is saying that a beach house wouldn't be fantastic; they're saying that OP couldn't afford to buy it, so too bad so sad. I too am bummed that I didn't have the money to buy affordable beachfront property 10, 20, 30 years ago, but that is life.
I would also not discount how difficult it can be to manage a jointly owned property. Maintenance, upkeep and taxes can be sizable expenses, and if you have reluctant or poor owners, you are going to have to deal with this all the time. Are you going to rent the property out at all? That's another source of conflict. Does one family live closer and use the house more often? Did someone in one family leave a boogie board there and another family used it? (there was a DCUM posting like that). Who decides when to redecorate and how much to spend? What happens to the next generation, when the house needs to be divided 3, 6, or 10 ways among the offspring of three families? It's easy to romanticize the past when you don't have to shell out every year for taxes and upkeep.
We have rented the same beach house year after year and have lovely memories and family traditions, even without being Bushes or Kennedys.
DP here. I think renting the same exact beach house each and every year, for generations, makes a big difference - but 90%of people are not able to do that.
Most beach houses are not worth renting the same each and every year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those low class Bush and Kennedy families are so dumb for keeping oceanfront land in the family for generations. Don’t they know you can rent at a variety of places on Airbnb and stay in hotels?
LOL, how stupid is this? If you're not wealthy like the Bushes or Kennedys, you might not even be able to keep the house for two generations. WHICH IS WHAT HAPPENED TO OP. Nobody here is saying that a beach house wouldn't be fantastic; they're saying that OP couldn't afford to buy it, so too bad so sad. I too am bummed that I didn't have the money to buy affordable beachfront property 10, 20, 30 years ago, but that is life.
I would also not discount how difficult it can be to manage a jointly owned property. Maintenance, upkeep and taxes can be sizable expenses, and if you have reluctant or poor owners, you are going to have to deal with this all the time. Are you going to rent the property out at all? That's another source of conflict. Does one family live closer and use the house more often? Did someone in one family leave a boogie board there and another family used it? (there was a DCUM posting like that). Who decides when to redecorate and how much to spend? What happens to the next generation, when the house needs to be divided 3, 6, or 10 ways among the offspring of three families? It's easy to romanticize the past when you don't have to shell out every year for taxes and upkeep.
We have rented the same beach house year after year and have lovely memories and family traditions, even without being Bushes or Kennedys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP.
Just to be clear -- is someone really implying that you have to own a beach house to create good memories and a happy childhood for your children? Really, or am I misreading how the dichotomy is set up?
I'm not sure that people without beach houses are confined to mortgagor children. That's ... an odd take.
I assume people who did not grow up with access to family vacation homes don’t really understand, so it’s easy to be dismissive about the experiences, memories and traditions. A rental is not the same thing, not even close. And also, if you’re miserable and hate where you’re from or are estranged from family, it’s even easier to be dismissive about all of this.
You ... get that my family without a beach house head living and strong traditions, too? That gathering and shucking pecans with my grandmother, her hand on mine as we rolled out the poor dough, are cherished, right?
That our giant family reunions riverside -- without a beach house -- full of games and laughing cousins were amazing, chasing fireflies and my uncle playing the violin as dusk came down?
Do you admit that you, who did not experience it, don't really understand and find it easy to be dismissive of that?
It's there any way at all you can stretch your brain to understand that even, yes even!, someone in your social circle might have married into a family with different and cherished traditions, or even -- even! -- themselves remember and cherish something different from you? Any way at all?
Or is it really that just the wealth-related traditions that you happen to like are the only ones that count?
Are you just as prone to dismissing my experience because you did not share it?
Thank you for confirming the point that miserable serial posters like you are triggered about topics like this. You like to see UMC people like OP knocked down a peg or two. And you have zero grasp of wealth, land, inheritance and family estate planning.
Anonymous wrote:Those low class Bush and Kennedy families are so dumb for keeping oceanfront land in the family for generations. Don’t they know you can rent at a variety of places on Airbnb and stay in hotels?