Anonymous wrote:I have a mutual friend who lives out of town and her local friend here lives in a $4 mil house in McLean.
When the mutual friend was in town we visited the McLean friend. I was told that the McLean friend was a little uncomfortable with me seeing her house (because I’m not rich?).
Yep, it’s a big house. Nice appliances in the kitchen. Some of the furniture looked shabby. But it is a large house.
I was mostly appalled that she was uncomfortable with me (the apparently poor person) seeing her house.
*That* was awkward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We pretend to not be financially stable (used that wording b/c we're not wealthly, but very well off compared to friends"). If I was honest about not having to work at our age and paying cash for cars and vacations, it would not go over well.
Friends ask "What interest rate are you paying on your house?" Well, we paid that off a decade ago answer will not go over well. I just lie. Trust me, friends, even great ones, aren't happy for you. Even if you worked for it and there is no inheritance or trust fund.
I don’t volunteer financial information but if someone was to ask me about my mortgage, I wouldn’t lie about not having one. Same with being full pay at private school.
So if everyone is sitting around having drinks at the end of a hard work week and you're the one person not struggling, and asked, you would just say "yeah, sucks to be you?" That's how it feels to me coming from a family with very little. If people are struggling with mortgage payments, say your best friend, you just say "well I don't have a mortgage" and let it be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You gently lay a hand on her arm when she's in full spate and you two are alone, lean in and say in your kindest, most sincere voice: "Please don't feel you need to justify your purchases to me, Larla. I'm glad you can buy all this stuff. It makes you happy for you."
Maybe somebody else is jealous around her, and she's afraid of offending everybody.
This. Do it discreetly and kindly.
Also ignore the trolls saying why does it matter and it's not your business. They are just miserable people who post nasty messages on an anonymous board trying to make people feel as bad as they already do. This is a friend. Of course we care about friends.
Oh my god, if you really care about your friend, OP, do not do what the PP suggests. “Gently lay a hand on her arm...” I really hope that post is a joke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We pretend to not be financially stable (used that wording b/c we're not wealthly, but very well off compared to friends"). If I was honest about not having to work at our age and paying cash for cars and vacations, it would not go over well.
Friends ask "What interest rate are you paying on your house?" Well, we paid that off a decade ago answer will not go over well. I just lie. Trust me, friends, even great ones, aren't happy for you. Even if you worked for it and there is no inheritance or trust fund.
I don’t volunteer financial information but if someone was to ask me about my mortgage, I wouldn’t lie about not having one. Same with being full pay at private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a wealthy person who lived frugally. I inherited 2M that grew to 4M because I do not touch it and live on my $200K earned income. I know I can’t re-earn what I inherited, so I don’t spend it. I just live within my means. My friends do not know how much money I have. OTOH they have done well
Over time and some of them are probably now richer than I am. We never talk about it. We are all just friends.
It's hard to "not talk about it". We are quietly better off than most of our friends group and don't "talk about it", but when we take an expensive vacation or buy a new car there's no way they don't know. And yes, when you hear them talk about other people that "don't have to worry about money" and the likes, you do get to feel like you are justifying, especially when you didn't grow up with money. It gets complicated.
Anonymous wrote:We pretend to not be financially stable (used that wording b/c we're not wealthly, but very well off compared to friends"). If I was honest about not having to work at our age and paying cash for cars and vacations, it would not go over well.
Friends ask "What interest rate are you paying on your house?" Well, we paid that off a decade ago answer will not go over well. I just lie. Trust me, friends, even great ones, aren't happy for you. Even if you worked for it and there is no inheritance or trust fund.
Anonymous wrote:I am a wealthy person who lived frugally. I inherited 2M that grew to 4M because I do not touch it and live on my $200K earned income. I know I can’t re-earn what I inherited, so I don’t spend it. I just live within my means. My friends do not know how much money I have. OTOH they have done well
Over time and some of them are probably now richer than I am. We never talk about it. We are all just friends.
Anonymous wrote:How are you really good friends?!
My really good friends would say "yes, b*tch we know you got money, you're buying the appetizers" and move on.
House in Nantucket? "I hope you didn't get too much of a good deal because I am coming to visit next summer so those renos better be NICE!"
New car "damn girl it looks awesome, I don't care if it runs on baby tears. Can you take me for a ride?"
You are making it awkward by responding with awkwardness to her awkward pretending she's middle class.