Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sort of came up in a thread about social status recently, but people were talking in abstract terms about how marital status and the person you marry impacts social status.
But I want to know if you, personally, judge women based on the social status of their husbands. If a woman is married to a guy whose family has money, or who has a higher status career like lawyer/doctor/C-suite/finance, do you think about her differently than you would if she was married to someone with working class parents or a lower status job?
Assume the woman's background, job, appearance, are all the same. Does your perception of her change based on the social status of the person she married? Not his personality or how he treats her or what kind of dad he is, but just the external social status based on money, family background, and job status.
Yes. Your choice of a mate reflects on your ability to choose well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really don’t think I judge. Come to think of it, I am not sure I know the profession of many friendly female acquaintances (you know the types you have their phone number but aren’t really long standing friends). Obviously if I have met their husbands I usually know what they do. But acquaintances at work that I chat with or moms who I am friendly with - I am not sure I know (or maybe I once knew but don’t remember). I do know stuff about them that their wives share. Two I heard this week as examples: “DH has coached soccer every year since my oldest was 5 and I have no idea what he is going to do with his free time now that youngest has no longer wants to play”. Or “DH is currently into coffee roasting and while I don’t love the smell, it’s great getting his coffee every morning”. I don’t know what either DH does for a profession. So I couldn’t judge the wives on their husbands social status if I wanted to.
Same. I don't know what any of my bookclub members' DHs do for a living. I also don't know what many of my female coworkers' DHs do. To be clear, I could not care less what they do; it's not important information to me.
Anonymous wrote:I really don’t think I judge. Come to think of it, I am not sure I know the profession of many friendly female acquaintances (you know the types you have their phone number but aren’t really long standing friends). Obviously if I have met their husbands I usually know what they do. But acquaintances at work that I chat with or moms who I am friendly with - I am not sure I know (or maybe I once knew but don’t remember). I do know stuff about them that their wives share. Two I heard this week as examples: “DH has coached soccer every year since my oldest was 5 and I have no idea what he is going to do with his free time now that youngest has no longer wants to play”. Or “DH is currently into coffee roasting and while I don’t love the smell, it’s great getting his coffee every morning”. I don’t know what either DH does for a profession. So I couldn’t judge the wives on their husbands social status if I wanted to.
Anonymous wrote:I mean - some men have money but they are fat or super unattractive or the wife is unattractive or they both suck as people or they have other problems or they have money but no taste or class. A million things go into judgment of others. Most semi attractive women could have married a rich unattractive man so assume if they didn’t they then aren’t jealous that someone else did
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have all the right education and good looks, but come from a rather broken family. I married someone wonderful, objectively from a much more high status family than mine. If we ever divorce, I don't think I'll ever remarry because the family dynamics have only gotten weirder over time, and I just can't imagine introducing someone. Honestly, most days I can barely cope with the shame of it myself.
I’m so sorry to hear that. At this point, do you think it’s possible for you to reflect on how your own value is not so tied to your family value of origin, but rather to the ways you have chosen to contribute to your community/family/work as an adult?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work with some very educated high earning women who are married to redneck-type men who are either in low paid jobs or not working. Many didn't complete undergrad, while their wives have PhDs. Honestly, I don't understand the attraction and, yes, I judge them. Usually the men are ugly and have no social ettiquette. Perhaps it's because I'm UC, so I just don't get it.
lol think whatever you want to make you feel better
Well, it might be another reason. Still unfathomable that an educated good looking person (man or woman) would marry an uncouth ugly uneducated person. It's strange. Usually, like marries like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not surprised that the responses overwhelmingly say that the poster doesn’t judge. People know it’s ugly and so many are the not even conscious about it. But judging happens on DCUM everyday. People keep it in better check in real life. But it’s pretty to avoid circles where it is overt.
This. The virtue signaling here is something else.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not surprised that the responses overwhelmingly say that the poster doesn’t judge. People know it’s ugly and so many are the not even conscious about it. But judging happens on DCUM everyday. People keep it in better check in real life. But it’s pretty to avoid circles where it is overt.
Anonymous wrote:I have all the right education and good looks, but come from a rather broken family. I married someone wonderful, objectively from a much more high status family than mine. If we ever divorce, I don't think I'll ever remarry because the family dynamics have only gotten weirder over time, and I just can't imagine introducing someone. Honestly, most days I can barely cope with the shame of it myself.
Anonymous wrote:
Let's try not to whenever we are about to judge anyone for anything.
Anonymous wrote:I have all the right education and good looks, but come from a rather broken family. I married someone wonderful, objectively from a much more high status family than mine. If we ever divorce, I don't think I'll ever remarry because the family dynamics have only gotten weirder over time, and I just can't imagine introducing someone. Honestly, most days I can barely cope with the shame of it myself.