Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow! Lots of trust fund babies with top 1% problems on this board. Millions of people in the world are starving and suffering. Many people in this country can't pay their bills or feed their kids, or they have to work three crappy jobs to do so. Get some perspective, your parents giving you too much money is not a problem, it is a blessing. So count that blessing and quit complaining.
Many people on this board came from families that had nothing-they were the ones starving and suffering- and took 100+ years of multiple jobs to finally get something. It's not a sin to finally do well, especially when your great grandparents were servants and dockworkers with 3+ jobs like mine who couldn't read.
I am not saying it is a "sin" to do well. I am just saying to stop b*tching about having too much money because there are a lot of people out there who still have nothing.
It's not about the money but the expectations that come with it. Gets too Faustian for some people. Nothing is for free. The more money some relatives pile on with supposed goodwill, the heavier the chains get. In some families that's all the elders have left in terms of control over their children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow! Lots of trust fund babies with top 1% problems on this board. Millions of people in the world are starving and suffering. Many people in this country can't pay their bills or feed their kids, or they have to work three crappy jobs to do so. Get some perspective, your parents giving you too much money is not a problem, it is a blessing. So count that blessing and quit complaining.
Many people on this board came from families that had nothing-they were the ones starving and suffering- and took 100+ years of multiple jobs to finally get something. It's not a sin to finally do well, especially when your great grandparents were servants and dockworkers with 3+ jobs like mine who couldn't read.
I am not saying it is a "sin" to do well. I am just saying to stop b*tching about having too much money because there are a lot of people out there who still have nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow! Lots of trust fund babies with top 1% problems on this board. Millions of people in the world are starving and suffering. Many people in this country can't pay their bills or feed their kids, or they have to work three crappy jobs to do so. Get some perspective, your parents giving you too much money is not a problem, it is a blessing. So count that blessing and quit complaining.
Many people on this board came from families that had nothing-they were the ones starving and suffering- and took 100+ years of multiple jobs to finally get something. It's not a sin to finally do well, especially when your great grandparents were servants and dockworkers with 3+ jobs like mine who couldn't read.
Anonymous wrote:Wow! Lots of trust fund babies with top 1% problems on this board. Millions of people in the world are starving and suffering. Many people in this country can't pay their bills or feed their kids, or they have to work three crappy jobs to do so. Get some perspective, your parents giving you too much money is not a problem, it is a blessing. So count that blessing and quit complaining.
Anonymous wrote:I like the idea of putting the money into a separate fund/investment for future expenses (college, retirement, etc). I think your parents are going to do the "After all we did for you" thing anyway. Send a nice Thank you note each time so they know you received and appreciate the gift. That is all.
Anonymous wrote:Digging the humble brag. But seriously, you could just politely tell them you don't want to take their hard earned money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You understand that for tax purposes, a gift to you doesn't not have the same benefit to the gift-giver that giving to a charity does, right? There's no 40% tax savings or avoidance.
There is if the estate is over the estate tax exemption limit which is currently ~10.7 million for a married couple. Anything over this amount is taxed at 40%.
Unless Trump gets elected and gets rid of the estate tax altogether.![]()
Anonymous wrote:You understand that for tax purposes, a gift to you doesn't not have the same benefit to the gift-giver that giving to a charity does, right? There's no 40% tax savings or avoidance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe they don't like the specter of paying Uncle Sam a huge estate tax and would rather some of it go to you now.
I vote for a gracious "thank you very much" and set it aside for someone's college.
This is why my parents do it.