Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the focus on dcurbanmom on these status symbols crazy. Why do you care what brand of shoes I wear and the purse I buy or whether I drive a luxury car or if I belong to a CC? We are middle income based on warped private school standards less than 250k per year but close to it. I could make my kids take put loans for college to buy that luxury car and belong to that CC ( we've saved 200k for college)... or keep a high mortgage balance and buy all of this crap to fit in with the parents. What bugs me the most are the wannabees who have no assets (one paycheck away from not being able to pay their mortgage):but flaunt their non-existant wealth and look down on us.
Except that you didn't buy all these things. They did all you did and still have money left over for their status symbols. Have some tolerance and curb your jealousy. They have twice the income that you do. It seems normal to them. Do you buy all of your clothes at a thrift store just because it is cheap? Neither do they. They just have a higher price point. Sorry.
Ever read millionaire next door.
We know a family 10 years older than us who completed a 100k upgrade to her home, expensive car, very showy....a few years later was talking about a mortgage mod because couldn't afford monthly payment.
Second family filed for bankruptcy.
A third snobby family girl is always complaining family has no money but very starus conscience luxury cars, vacations and probably cc member.
Another family ent through bankruptcy due to overspending.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's more that these trappings are indicative of lifestyle. I don't know any families where mom drives a Cayenne and they belong to a CC, but they have no assets. Actually, the moms with the fancy clothes and such tend to be SAHMs, have second homes at the beach or in Colorado, babysitters, husbands are BigLaw partners or CEOs, etc. there is another lower set who might have the purses and the CC and such without the other homes and great vacations, but that doesn't mean they have no assets necessarily - these tend to be working moms at least part time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't appreciate people dismissing us because they flaunt more.
I really think it's in your head. How about you get your kid in the best school for the kid and then leave it at that? Resist making it about you.
If parents are dismissive to other parents, you don't think the kids pick up on the queues. PLEASE.
I don't think parents are dismissive so no queues for kids in any event. Whatever that means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the focus on dcurbanmom on these status symbols crazy. Why do you care what brand of shoes I wear and the purse I buy or whether I drive a luxury car or if I belong to a CC? We are middle income based on warped private school standards less than 250k per year but close to it. I could make my kids take put loans for college to buy that luxury car and belong to that CC ( we've saved 200k for college)... or keep a high mortgage balance and buy all of this crap to fit in with the parents. What bugs me the most are the wannabees who have no assets (one paycheck away from not being able to pay their mortgage):but flaunt their non-existant wealth and look down on us.
Except that you didn't buy all these things. They did all you did and still have money left over for their status symbols. Have some tolerance and curb your jealousy. They have twice the income that you do. It seems normal to them. Do you buy all of your clothes at a thrift store just because it is cheap? Neither do they. They just have a higher price point. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:I find the focus on dcurbanmom on these status symbols crazy. Why do you care what brand of shoes I wear and the purse I buy or whether I drive a luxury car or if I belong to a CC? We are middle income based on warped private school standards less than 250k per year but close to it. I could make my kids take put loans for college to buy that luxury car and belong to that CC ( we've saved 200k for college)... or keep a high mortgage balance and buy all of this crap to fit in with the parents. What bugs me the most are the wannabees who have no assets (one paycheck away from not being able to pay their mortgage):but flaunt their non-existant wealth and look down on us.