Anonymous wrote:I'm similar to you and bought a $1.4M home about 10 years ago, when i was your age, that is worth about $2.5M in another major US city. Debtless college and no other help (not even advice) from family. My DH felt it the most from his peers. They judged him, or assumed we had family money, and felt envious. I actually didn't have too many "friends" in the area because we were fairly new, so most "friends" came from work and never came to my house.
My family was the worst. My mom was happy and envious, which brought about some strange behaviors. My siblings didn't really care too much since they were wrapped in their lives. Until one of my sisters wanted similar stability for her kids. Then she started making snide comments. She still makes them sometimes. I have a sneaking suspicion that she is telling my parents to disinherit me in favor of her because she "needs" it more. It makes me feels sad. And sadder that I think they will do it. Less the issue with money and more being from a toxic family.
On the other hand pur home has increased dramatically in value and we were able to take advantage of low interest rates of the time. Because of this we also bought a vacation home in a sought after location that has tripled in value.
Same. I think this dynamic is more prevalent than we know. As soon as (envious party - family or not) sees something they want, even if they did not KNOW they wanted it until YOU had it - the wrath begins. God help you if they are mentally ill, and have tendencies to fixate/ruminate - then they are like a rabid dog with a bone (the bone being topic of "why" YOU have what you have) - instead of focusing on bettering themselves. You learn how messed up some people really are, which turns out to be a blessing.