Anonymous wrote:High end ski trips every winter or spring break with all the fancy gear and clothes. Sailing camp in the summer along with somewhere international once a year. Expensive sleep away camp in the summer. This is how you separate the poors from the wealthy at our private school. I won't tell you which camp we are in.
Anonymous wrote:This is one of the most hilarious threads I've ever read. So many people trying to self identify with a meaningless label. And such a trashy one!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the butter discussion fascinating! I had no idea that you are not supposed to butter your whole piece of bread
Really? You are either young (under 35) or not raised UMC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. The butter aside is hilarious...and long-lived. Every time it pops back up, I laugh.![]()
Thank you all for your thoughtful replies. It sounds like manners are a must. Volunteering/kindness and culture are close seconds.
These were the last things I expected to hear, but it makes sense. Of course, being lower class, socially, I guess that's no surprise.
To the PPs telling me to stay true to myself, well, I am. I already feel like an impostor most of the time, I don't have to add feeling fake to the mix. I am heavy, dress badly, unmanicured, and yet I'm quite happy with myself. I've provided a better life for my kids and parents than we deserve. I don't want to spend my time literally reshaping myself. I have a vegetable garden to tend to!
For my kids, though, I want them to have it all. I want them to feel and be authentic. I'm truly grateful to have all of your advice.
Now, I guess the challenge to figure out how to implement it. Manners are a relentless pursuit. You have to have them all the freaking time. F**k me. :\
Ugh, stop denigrating yourself. These people are no better than you. Do you already have good manners? Are you kind? Do you teach those values to your children? Then you're fine.
I second this PP. Remember OP, she who has the gold makes the rules. You don't have to fit in somebody else's box. You can do it your way. I know an old money family that wears flip flops and shops at Costco. What, why? Because they like to.
Their kids also fence and have horses.
Be principled, considerate, kind and recognize the inherent worth of people (including yourself) and you will always be showing the spirit of manners even if you put your napkin on the table by accident. Then you can feel comfortable going anywhere and meeting anybody.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disagree. Grew up UMC and we talked about value. Even if you can afford to buy the $500 sneakers they may not be "a good value" (compared to the very similar $100 sneakers) so we would say they cost too much. We are trying to teach our kids the same thing - spend your money wisely. No need to throw it away. In fact, I'm pretty sure our kids think we are poor based on how we talk about spending money.![]()
I don't think this is different than my point. The point is you don't think about spending money in terms of whether you can afford it but rather in terms of whether the purchase makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Disagree. Grew up UMC and we talked about value. Even if you can afford to buy the $500 sneakers they may not be "a good value" (compared to the very similar $100 sneakers) so we would say they cost too much. We are trying to teach our kids the same thing - spend your money wisely. No need to throw it away. In fact, I'm pretty sure our kids think we are poor based on how we talk about spending money.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't talk about money, ever. ...
How do umc parents respond to their children when kids make comments regarding the cost of things? Ex... "dad I want to buy this, it's so cheap". "Oppps, it broke...I'll just buy another one, they're only a few dollars". When kids want something that is over excessive like beach slippers that will be used once but cost 30 bucks because it has a pink butterfly.... do you say it's too expensive get the cheaper ones?