Anonymous wrote:You are in your 40s and just now realizing this is how the world works? Also, law partners and MDs are not the truly wealthy and likely did not come from a great deal of wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thai is literally the reason people send their kids to private schools op to mingle with other rich kids.
Only a handful are married to men they went to high school with.
You don’t get it. I went to a private school in DC. We hung out with kids from other DC private schools. I cannot think of one public school kid we hung out with with the exception of summer swim team. So you meet other private school friends, visit them in college, meet their private school college friends, go to the same county clubs and beaches, and ski resorts, etc.
I see. So it's not just the immediate alumni network of the prep school, it's also friends of friends from that alumni network paying dating, social and even career dividends?
I started a thread recently about people in this area and how much they seem to care about getting their kid into the right private schools. They seem to care less about not going to a top college. I’m glad I am not imagining this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are surprised that people with money marry people with money?
+1. Is this really the first time you've noticed this, OP?
None of my public school sorority sisters grew up deprived. Public or prep high school, all of us were more or less from the same cluster of affluent towns. Of course if you force me to think, I guess I understand the richest tend to marry rich, but I've never seen such a close controlled data set where it's literally 100% of the private/prep school women married well and it's so hit and miss with their prettier public school peers. I was shocked last night as I was clicking through Facebook friends, so I thought I'd share. I did not know this was so obvious and common.
I can't think of a single person I went to my private high school with who is divorced. In our graduating class I knew of only two kids who had divorced parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There were about 160 sisters in my sorority over 20 years ago. Looking back, while some of the prettiest classic beauty sisters married well, frankly, many of them did not. They frequently complain about finances, many are on second marriages, and some are single divorcees dating much older men. A handful never married and have no children – they seem to have successful careers. With the benefit of hindsight, who seems to have married the best? As crazy as this probably sounds, I double-checked this on Facebook last night and literally all of my sisters who went to ritzy private day schools and boarding schools married well. Literally 100%. All of them are married to either successful MDs, law partners, business executives, or entrepreneurs. No divorces. All of them have children. They live in elegant homes, especially for our age range, in premier neighborhoods. And for the sake of total honestly, these sisters were and are largely average appearance-wise. I am not saying that to be cruel or out of jealously, I was also average if not below average for our chapter, and I went to public school.
Is there something to this?
You do not know what is going on is someone else’s marriage or their finances.
Actually I do. I am in iMessage group chats with dozens of sisters. We get together all the time. We talk on the phone and FaceTime. If anything, we all know too much about each other's marriages, careers, and personal lives!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thai is literally the reason people send their kids to private schools op to mingle with other rich kids.
Only a handful are married to men they went to high school with.
You don’t get it. I went to a private school in DC. We hung out with kids from other DC private schools. I cannot think of one public school kid we hung out with with the exception of summer swim team. So you meet other private school friends, visit them in college, meet their private school college friends, go to the same county clubs and beaches, and ski resorts, etc.
I see. So it's not just the immediate alumni network of the prep school, it's also friends of friends from that alumni network paying dating, social and even career dividends?
I started a thread recently about people in this area and how much they seem to care about getting their kid into the right private schools. They seem to care less about not going to a top college. I’m glad I am not imagining this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are in your 40s and just now realizing this is how the world works? Also, law partners and MDs are not the truly wealthy and likely did not come from a great deal of wealth.
DP. Every MD I know is STILL paying off at least some med school debt, even into their 40s, but I guess OP assumes they all had rich parents to pay for undergrad plus med school, and they make a fortune. Not necessarily true on either count. But that's the real world, not a curated online life on FB or wherever OP gets her so-called research.
Anonymous wrote:There were about 160 sisters in my sorority over 20 years ago. Looking back, while some of the prettiest classic beauty sisters married well, frankly, many of them did not. They frequently complain about finances, many are on second marriages, and some are single divorcees dating much older men. A handful never married and have no children – they seem to have successful careers. With the benefit of hindsight, who seems to have married the best? As crazy as this probably sounds, I double-checked this on Facebook last night and literally all of my sisters who went to ritzy private day schools and boarding schools married well. Literally 100%. All of them are married to either successful MDs, law partners, business executives, or entrepreneurs. No divorces. All of them have children. They live in elegant homes, especially for our age range, in premier neighborhoods. And for the sake of total honestly, these sisters were and are largely average appearance-wise. I am not saying that to be cruel or out of jealously, I was also average if not below average for our chapter, and I went to public school.
Is there something to this?
Anonymous wrote:Thai is literally the reason people send their kids to private schools op to mingle with other rich kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There were about 160 sisters in my sorority over 20 years ago. Looking back, while some of the prettiest classic beauty sisters married well, frankly, many of them did not. They frequently complain about finances, many are on second marriages, and some are single divorcees dating much older men. A handful never married and have no children – they seem to have successful careers. With the benefit of hindsight, who seems to have married the best? As crazy as this probably sounds, I double-checked this on Facebook last night and literally all of my sisters who went to ritzy private day schools and boarding schools married well. Literally 100%. All of them are married to either successful MDs, law partners, business executives, or entrepreneurs. No divorces. All of them have children. They live in elegant homes, especially for our age range, in premier neighborhoods. And for the sake of total honestly, these sisters were and are largely average appearance-wise. I am not saying that to be cruel or out of jealously, I was also average if not below average for our chapter, and I went to public school.
Is there something to this?
You do not know what is going on is someone else’s marriage or their finances.
Actually I do. I am in iMessage group chats with dozens of sisters. We get together all the time. We talk on the phone and FaceTime. If anything, we all know too much about each other's marriages, careers, and personal lives!
Anonymous wrote:This seems a little creepy that you have examined all 160 of your sorority sisters marriages through social media or gossip. Does it make you feel superior to them so that’s why you did it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thai is literally the reason people send their kids to private schools op to mingle with other rich kids.
Only a handful are married to men they went to high school with.
You don’t get it. I went to a private school in DC. We hung out with kids from other DC private schools. I cannot think of one public school kid we hung out with with the exception of summer swim team. So you meet other private school friends, visit them in college, meet their private school college friends, go to the same county clubs and beaches, and ski resorts, etc.
I see. So it's not just the immediate alumni network of the prep school, it's also friends of friends from that alumni network paying dating, social and even career dividends?
Anonymous wrote:This seems a little creepy that you have examined all 160 of your sorority sisters marriages through social media or gossip. Does it make you feel superior to them so that’s why you did it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are surprised that people with money marry people with money?
+1. Is this really the first time you've noticed this, OP?
None of my public school sorority sisters grew up deprived. Public or prep high school, all of us were more or less from the same cluster of affluent towns. Of course if you force me to think, I guess I understand the richest tend to marry rich, but I've never seen such a close controlled data set where it's literally 100% of the private/prep school women married well and it's so hit and miss with their prettier public school peers. I was shocked last night as I was clicking through Facebook friends, so I thought I'd share. I did not know this was so obvious and common.
I can't think of a single person I went to my private high school with who is divorced. In our graduating class I knew of only two kids who had divorced parents.