Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having gone to an Ivy League school and then lived many years in New York City, I noticed that people with money fall into 2 camps. One camp tends to be flashy (and in NYC, flashy does not always equate true wealth) and the other camp tends to prefer projecting "normal" like average middle class American. Some used to classify as old money vs new money. Would that describe your situation with your friend?
I think this is it. I really hate to display my own privilege and feel rather sensitive about it. I have even taken to simply not telling people about the trips I’m taking or other specifics on money to avoid making people uncomfortable or jealous. My friend however does it with gusto and a little bit of judgment. This is the person who in conversation with those less well off will suddenly begin talking about how they just got access to private banking and it’s sooo great and how their financial advisor told them they would have x much by then, etc.
Oof this is bad. I would say something.
Anonymous wrote:Life is short. Personally I would end the friendship if it’s not bringing you anything positive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would give her a talk. "You might not realize but you've started talking about money and acquisitions a lot this year and that's a big change. What's going on? Would you mind taking a break from it when we talk?"
I'd only advise this is if the friend is the type who is open to feedback. Otherwise I'd just quietly scale back how much time I spend with the friend.
+1
I've had to scale a friendship back for this reason and that didn't go well either. J
I think she took everything as a personal slight without the least bit of introspection. This might be common for insecure people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would give her a talk. "You might not realize but you've started talking about money and acquisitions a lot this year and that's a big change. What's going on? Would you mind taking a break from it when we talk?"
I'd only advise this is if the friend is the type who is open to feedback. Otherwise I'd just quietly scale back how much time I spend with the friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would give her a talk. "You might not realize but you've started talking about money and acquisitions a lot this year and that's a big change. What's going on? Would you mind taking a break from it when we talk?"
I'd only advise this is if the friend is the type who is open to feedback. Otherwise I'd just quietly scale back how much time I spend with the friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having gone to an Ivy League school and then lived many years in New York City, I noticed that people with money fall into 2 camps. One camp tends to be flashy (and in NYC, flashy does not always equate true wealth) and the other camp tends to prefer projecting "normal" like average middle class American. Some used to classify as old money vs new money. Would that describe your situation with your friend?
I think this is it. I really hate to display my own privilege and feel rather sensitive about it. I have even taken to simply not telling people about the trips I’m taking or other specifics on money to avoid making people uncomfortable or jealous. My friend however does it with gusto and a little bit of judgment. This is the person who in conversation with those less well off will suddenly begin talking about how they just got access to private banking and it’s sooo great and how their financial advisor told them they would have x much by then, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having gone to an Ivy League school and then lived many years in New York City, I noticed that people with money fall into 2 camps. One camp tends to be flashy (and in NYC, flashy does not always equate true wealth) and the other camp tends to prefer projecting "normal" like average middle class American. Some used to classify as old money vs new money. Would that describe your situation with your friend?
I think this is it. I really hate to display my own privilege and feel rather sensitive about it. I have even taken to simply not telling people about the trips I’m taking or other specifics on money to avoid making people uncomfortable or jealous. My friend however does it with gusto and a little bit of judgment. This is the person who in conversation with those less well off will suddenly begin talking about how they just got access to private banking and it’s sooo great and how their financial advisor told them they would have x much by then, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What money range are we talking about and what lifestyle are they projecting?
I assume HHI of about $700k. Constant discussion of cars, trips, and second home etc