Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.
You are wasting your money on private schools, others prefer to waste it on nice cars. At the end, you are still spending money.
There are no evidences that children who go to private schools finish better that children who don't.
Rich kids who went to private schools would have been rich anyway through inheritance.
Private school is mostly a luxury. It is a way for rich folks to avoid mingling with poor people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.
You are wasting your money on private schools, others prefer to waste it on nice cars. At the end, you are still spending money.
There are no evidences that children who go to private schools finish better that children who don't.
Rich kids who went to private schools would have been rich anyway through inheritance.
Private school is mostly a luxury. It is a way for rich folks to avoid mingling with poor people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here: yes, I so know someone like this. Lived lavishly and then an ms diagnosis changed everything.
If I received an MS diagnosis I’d be even more upset I spent my best years living like a poor person!
Same. There is space between living like a pauper and spending every dime you have. You can live well and save, too. I certainly do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.
Well let me see. My parents did make a good life for me but there was/is no wealth to pass on because their parents who worked hard and did their best did not inherit any wealth because their parents were sharecroppers who didn't inherit any wealth because their parents were slaves and their parents were slaves and their parents were slaves....
Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.
Well let me see. My parents did make a good life for me but there was/is no wealth to pass on because their parents who worked hard and did their best did not inherit any wealth because their parents were sharecroppers who didn't inherit any wealth because their parents were slaves and their parents were slaves and their parents were slaves....
The whole narrative of this thread is innately classist/racist. Thank you for pointing this out.
In that vein, my great-grandparents were immigrant factory workers, my grandparents made nice middle-class lives (teachers, secretaries), and my parents and their siblings were the first generation to earn advanced degrees. Enough to make a nice income, but no inherited wealth. It does make a difference.
Try looking at it another way. A good question is what differentiates people who have equal privilege and maintain or enhance it versus those who do not ( weather because they squandered things or are not directed). It is not a statement that those with financial or educational or social wherewithal somehow deserve it more than others, but rather a question of how, as compared to others in the same boat, one can live in a way that enhances their family’s ability to prosper. Put another way, given a wealthy person situation in life, what steps do they take to maintain or enhance it as opposed to being a shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves family in three generations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here: yes, I so know someone like this. Lived lavishly and then an ms diagnosis changed everything.
If I received an MS diagnosis I’d be even more upset I spent my best years living like a poor person!
My husband has MS. It is not a death sentence. There is no reason to expect his lifespan will be cut short. But he will need significant health care and assistance with daily living tasks as he gets older.
Therefore, we are very financially conservative.
My boyfriend’s mother has it, my grandfather has it, and I worked in a nursing home when I was younger. I’ve seen the exact opposite experiences that have been bed ridden and painful. I’m sorry your husband has it but your experience does not speak for the massses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.
Well let me see. My parents did make a good life for me but there was/is no wealth to pass on because their parents who worked hard and did their best did not inherit any wealth because their parents were sharecroppers who didn't inherit any wealth because their parents were slaves and their parents were slaves and their parents were slaves....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.
Well let me see. My parents did make a good life for me but there was/is no wealth to pass on because their parents who worked hard and did their best did not inherit any wealth because their parents were sharecroppers who didn't inherit any wealth because their parents were slaves and their parents were slaves and their parents were slaves....
Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.
Anonymous wrote:
That's probably the local culture and is not representative of all rich or wealthy people, or even a majority thereof. You do what you want and what makes you happy, while at the same time don't ridicule others who choose to behave differently with their money. It just as inane for you to find it in poor taste for others to spend their money as others may shun your thrifty lifestyle. There is no right or wrong answer in this, as it falls down to subjective preference. As long as the spending is within their means, there is no negative lesson to be learned from rich people spending their money in ways that pleases them.
Anonymous wrote:Think of your family -- your children and grandchildren, and the sacrifices your parents and grandparents made to get you where you are. What some would call "privilege" (such a silly term) is most often the result of previous generations of a family thinking about future generations of the family. I spend over $70k per year on private schools for my two children, max out my investments, but drive an old Toyota. I'd prefer to leave more for my children and grandchildren (and to teach them to do the same, as my father taught me) than to impress you with a Jaguar or Rolex.