Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Men at their son's sports event at 2:30 on a Wednesday.
good one
My husband is one of those men. In his case, it just means that he's a federal employee who has tons and tons of annual leave
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:being extremely well traveled by the references you make about places in Europe or Asia or other international destinations.
I fit in very well with the private school/club crowd but when people start sharing stories about that "little hotel in Venice" or the pyramids or other exotic locations I really feel out of my element.
Ugh, I give up.
Why do you give up?
When rich, well traveled people talk about places they've been and compare notes with their 1%er friends they are oblivious that not everyone travels overseas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:being extremely well traveled by the references you make about places in Europe or Asia or other international destinations.
I fit in very well with the private school/club crowd but when people start sharing stories about that "little hotel in Venice" or the pyramids or other exotic locations I really feel out of my element.
Ugh, I give up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Walking to get on the Metro to go to work at 10. Means you're a partner or otherwise management level. Also, skateboarding or scootering to work (when you're an adult) means- I am a highly paid, creative, offbeat and invaluable member of my work team at my very cool start up company job.
Metro does not belong in this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old oil painting of a 19th century great great grandfather/senator hanging in the dining room, framed letter from George Washington to relative hanging in home office…
In the dining room in 2014? Pompous…grasping, etc…but having these things in a den or home office, very cool.
Are dining rooms pompous? And what if you have the painting but not a home office or den?
Anonymous wrote:Walking to get on the Metro to go to work at 10. Means you're a partner or otherwise management level. Also, skateboarding or scootering to work (when you're an adult) means- I am a highly paid, creative, offbeat and invaluable member of my work team at my very cool start up company job.
Anonymous wrote:Walking to get on the Metro to go to work at 10. Means you're a partner or otherwise management level. Also, skateboarding or scootering to work (when you're an adult) means- I am a highly paid, creative, offbeat and invaluable member of my work team at my very cool start up company job.
Anonymous wrote:An immaculately kept 15-plus-year-old Mercedes or Audi. One buys nice things, but treats them well so they last a long time. If it doesn't have a CD player (let alone iPod/bluetooth connection), one must deal with it.
Going back to more mainstream unintentional status symbols:
... Genuine Hunter wellies (olive green, not leopard print or Georgetown Cupcake pink)
... Monogrammed cardstock stationery, and if you use it to thank a neighbor who handed down some old baby clothes to you
... If you google yourself and one of your first hits is your wedding announcement in the New York Times (no other paper counts)
... Ski or boat rack on your car roof
... High school ring not manufactured by Josten's (i.e., no large fake gem in the middle)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15:08, is this the first time you've ever thought about this question?
Yes, the first time I read completely moronic threads on DCUM is the first time I think about many of these ridiculously stupid issues. Most useful unintentional status symbol? Being wealthy enough not to give a s**t what anyone else thinks about what I own/don't own/do with my money.
lol. Being land rich and cash poor in DC makes you irritable, don't it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15:08, is this the first time you've ever thought about this question?
Yes, the first time I read completely moronic threads on DCUM is the first time I think about many of these ridiculously stupid issues. Most useful unintentional status symbol? Being wealthy enough not to give a s**t what anyone else thinks about what I own/don't own/do with my money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not being aware of how much things cost.
THIS.
That's silly. I know how much things cost. The point is I can afford them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not being aware of how much things cost.
THIS.