Anonymous wrote:Make them work service jobs in high school
Anonymous wrote:Not a week goes by without someone posting about how they discovered their Chevy Chase neighbors are living in their parents’ house or having their kids’ fancy private school paid by the grandparents.
There is no need to “prepare” because this is what people will be doing. The generationally wealthy will stay wealthy, just as they have always done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow as a downwardly mobile-feeling MC person (grew up MC in a LCOL rural area, well educated and doing fine now but housing is noticeably worse), this thread is kind of eye opening and depressing.
I think there was only ONE post in 3 pages that talked about community, church, etc. But people who don't have fortunes to leave to their kids and can't "outsource everything" actually do depend on others more, and help others more. Also, life is more pleasant with a community. These are critically important values and experiences for me to pass on to my kids. The individualistic mindset here is really striking.
Second, work ethic is important and jobs in high school help with that, but they certainly won't give your kid the drive to rise above the rabble and become UMC. Plenty of people who worked in my high school are still in my hometown, working at auto shops and call centers and so on. Not sure what lesson that's supposed to teach.
That’s true! And I have recently joined a church and go consistently. But as a typical American, I don’t consider leaning on community. That needs to change!
What I think both of you are missing is that people lean on community for community... not for money.
What the people who are worried about their kids being downwardly mobile is that they lack any community. They were work, work, work, study, buy things, travel, work.
That is no life and kids see that so they don't even see the benefit of this horrible life.
Friendship/Family/Community/Nature/Caring/Giving/health these make for a good life not money.
That’s not me. I am just addicted to this site. But I’m also happy when my high schooler gets a C in low math because it’s not his subject.
Finding a faith community has really improved my life. It’s nice to be with people who aren’t all about achievement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the heck is downward mobility?
UMC to MC
Unlikely if they go to a decent college and graduate with a useful degree
Not at all. It's the experience of 30-50 year olds, people of my generation, in the US, Europe and Japan. This is why there is so much discontent and voters who support extreme left or extreme right parties in multiple democracies around the world. They feel they've been robbed, because with their background and degrees, they expected at least the lifestyle of their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't worry about my kids I worry about my grandkids. My kids have trust funds I can't take from them. I want them to go into stable careers even though they don't have to.
Why don’t you create generation skipping trusts if you’re worried about the grandchildren?
I don't control my kids' trusts. Long story. But we are telling them we're not paying $100k for them to major in dance. They can go be lawyers like everyone in our family ten generations back and add to the pot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow as a downwardly mobile-feeling MC person (grew up MC in a LCOL rural area, well educated and doing fine now but housing is noticeably worse), this thread is kind of eye opening and depressing.
I think there was only ONE post in 3 pages that talked about community, church, etc. But people who don't have fortunes to leave to their kids and can't "outsource everything" actually do depend on others more, and help others more. Also, life is more pleasant with a community. These are critically important values and experiences for me to pass on to my kids. The individualistic mindset here is really striking.
Second, work ethic is important and jobs in high school help with that, but they certainly won't give your kid the drive to rise above the rabble and become UMC. Plenty of people who worked in my high school are still in my hometown, working at auto shops and call centers and so on. Not sure what lesson that's supposed to teach.
That’s true! And I have recently joined a church and go consistently. But as a typical American, I don’t consider leaning on community. That needs to change!
What I think both of you are missing is that people lean on community for community... not for money.
What the people who are worried about their kids being downwardly mobile is that they lack any community. They were work, work, work, study, buy things, travel, work.
That is no life and kids see that so they don't even see the benefit of this horrible life.
Friendship/Family/Community/Nature/Caring/Giving/health these make for a good life not money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow as a downwardly mobile-feeling MC person (grew up MC in a LCOL rural area, well educated and doing fine now but housing is noticeably worse), this thread is kind of eye opening and depressing.
I think there was only ONE post in 3 pages that talked about community, church, etc. But people who don't have fortunes to leave to their kids and can't "outsource everything" actually do depend on others more, and help others more. Also, life is more pleasant with a community. These are critically important values and experiences for me to pass on to my kids. The individualistic mindset here is really striking.
Second, work ethic is important and jobs in high school help with that, but they certainly won't give your kid the drive to rise above the rabble and become UMC. Plenty of people who worked in my high school are still in my hometown, working at auto shops and call centers and so on. Not sure what lesson that's supposed to teach.
That’s true! And I have recently joined a church and go consistently. But as a typical American, I don’t consider leaning on community. That needs to change!
What I think both of you are missing is that people lean on community for community... not for money.
What the people who are worried about their kids being downwardly mobile is that they lack any community. They were work, work, work, study, buy things, travel, work.
That is no life and kids see that so they don't even see the benefit of this horrible life.
Friendship/Family/Community/Nature/Caring/Giving/health these make for a good life not money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow as a downwardly mobile-feeling MC person (grew up MC in a LCOL rural area, well educated and doing fine now but housing is noticeably worse), this thread is kind of eye opening and depressing.
I think there was only ONE post in 3 pages that talked about community, church, etc. But people who don't have fortunes to leave to their kids and can't "outsource everything" actually do depend on others more, and help others more. Also, life is more pleasant with a community. These are critically important values and experiences for me to pass on to my kids. The individualistic mindset here is really striking.
Second, work ethic is important and jobs in high school help with that, but they certainly won't give your kid the drive to rise above the rabble and become UMC. Plenty of people who worked in my high school are still in my hometown, working at auto shops and call centers and so on. Not sure what lesson that's supposed to teach.
That’s true! And I have recently joined a church and go consistently. But as a typical American, I don’t consider leaning on community. That needs to change!
Anonymous wrote:Wow as a downwardly mobile-feeling MC person (grew up MC in a LCOL rural area, well educated and doing fine now but housing is noticeably worse), this thread is kind of eye opening and depressing.
I think there was only ONE post in 3 pages that talked about community, church, etc. But people who don't have fortunes to leave to their kids and can't "outsource everything" actually do depend on others more, and help others more. Also, life is more pleasant with a community. These are critically important values and experiences for me to pass on to my kids. The individualistic mindset here is really striking.
Second, work ethic is important and jobs in high school help with that, but they certainly won't give your kid the drive to rise above the rabble and become UMC. Plenty of people who worked in my high school are still in my hometown, working at auto shops and call centers and so on. Not sure what lesson that's supposed to teach.
Anonymous wrote:Why prepare now? Dance until the music stops.