Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It feels like bragging to talk about your promotion with your parents. Why do they need to know about that?
What a ridiculous statement. Can you imagine not being able to share your successes with your parents. If that's true you know you are looking at a dysfunctional family. I can not imagine being that way toward my kids.
Crazy.
Anonymous wrote:It feels like bragging to talk about your promotion with your parents. Why do they need to know about that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like there’s many older posters on here who empathize with OP’s mom. OP, I get it. I’m very careful with what I share with my mom but even the barest of details divulged gets jealousy from her and especially my sister. My sister is jealous and hateful of every single thing I have, including my house, kids, husband, etc. She admitted it to me once and now I don’t have any relationship with her.
Not at all. I'm the most financially/professionally successful kid in my family by far, my mom helps both my brother and sister financially, and I live states away from everyone else. But I don't look down on my siblings or parents and in turn, they don't give me the "text cold shoulder" that is sending OP into such a tizzy.
Anonymous wrote:People who don't have money tend to live frugally and look down on those who spend money frivolously (or what would be frivolous to them). It's a class difference.
Anonymous wrote:They might not necessarily hate that you're independent, as much as they just relate to and understand your sibling more easily.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I don't get the vibe that OP acts superior towards her family. She made statements here to us, just so we'd understand the situation.
You'll just have to restrict info even more, and try not to get irritated during the inevitable times when something slips through and they act all shocked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who don't have money tend to live frugally and look down on those who spend money frivolously (or what would be frivolous to them). It's a class difference.
My parents are rich and frugal. They also look down on those who spend money differently. Definitely not a class thing. I think it's an insecurity thing - they are descendants of farmers and bankers in the Midwest. You can imagine the intergenerational trauma from the depression - stock market crash and dust bowl. They survived and remained wealthy, perhaps frugality is how.