Anonymous wrote:
OP, you probably should have posted in a financial forum. I understand what you're trying to say, though.
I have a "wealthy" co-worker who hangs out with a wealthy crowd and they take expensive vacations and talk investments, etc. which she is very discreet about. She also remains very involved with the family and friends who have mostly blue collar backgrounds and have no idea of her recent "millionaire" status.
Anonymous wrote:"OP again. You are misreading my post. I am very humble and modest. I go out of my way to downplay my wealth and I don't post on FB. I'm probably more like your marathon friend. When people talk about their struggles, such as living paycheck to paycheck, I try to listen, even though I can no longer relate to their problems. (Sometimes I truly feel sorry, but sometimes I think they are idiots for making poor life decisions).
What I am trying to say is that as my wealth increases, I am doing more interesting and expensive things. I am trying to find an outlet for discussing those things in a comfortable environment without losing my friends and family. In other words, I want to start talking to your friend about that European vacation. I've spent most of my life talking to the 60K marathoner already. Very interesting, but I've already done that. "
Yikes!
Anonymous wrote:OP must be a troll ... or really really clueless. No one will resent you if you talk about your lovely vacations or your new home. Now if you post a picture of a new purse, complete with price tag, on Facebook, well yeah, they might find you a little strange. But that would be more because it would seem you have a screw loose than about your money.
If you think money takes away the ability to maintain the interest in things that really matter in life ... like family and friends and good books you've read and maybe interesting things you've read in the newspaper ... then you really are clueless and shallow. rich people still (hopefully) love their families more than their money. They still have struggles at work and home, aging paretns, challenged children that they may want to share, etc, and rich full lives that would likely leave little time for discussing a handbag.
But I am going to give you the benefit of the doubt and guess you are troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is impossible NOT to post about wealth on FB. FB is all about vacations (I travel to exotic destinations frequently). FB is about food (fancy restaurants and meals and dinner parties). FB is about sharing that new handbag you purchased. Or a new car. Or that new stainless steel refrigerator. Even if you make donations or pursue advanced degrees, people know that you need money to do that. People can be envious that they don't have money to do the same.
My point is that most FB posts are about how you live, which is directly associated to your wealth.
Sweetie, people just don't care about that stuff. Sorry, but they don't. And they are probably laughing at you everytime you post. I promise you, no one cares about your new handbag.
Just went back and looked at my page -
Yesterday I posted a picture of my son at his Martial Arts testing.
There is a post about my DH and I working in the backyard.
I scanned and posted my son's school picture for his grandparents.
I posted a news article and tagged my college aged boys. It was relevant to their degrees.
I posted a couple of links to some neat gardening stuff.
We went to church and out to eat and I posted the name of the Indian restaurant because it was so incredibly good!
My daughter's rowing team traveled to a regatta and I posted the results plus a couple of pictures.
I posted a picture of our family sitting around the fire pit roasting marshmallows last week.
Most of these posts were directly for the benefit of grandparents who live far away. I don't have any friends who post about handbags. The only exotic vacation pictures I care about are the ones that have people in them - and that's what my friends post. I have lots of very wealthy friends. None of them use facebook to make sure the world knows they are wealthy.
Nobody cares about these, either.
I disagree. Unlike the person who posted her daughter's feet (???), these posts are intended for family who live far away (as the poster said). This is the exact type of stuff the family would be interested in. As for gardening stuff, one would imagine the poster has like-minded friends who'd be interested in gardening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is impossible NOT to post about wealth on FB. FB is all about vacations (I travel to exotic destinations frequently). FB is about food (fancy restaurants and meals and dinner parties). FB is about sharing that new handbag you purchased. Or a new car. Or that new stainless steel refrigerator. Even if you make donations or pursue advanced degrees, people know that you need money to do that. People can be envious that they don't have money to do the same.
My point is that most FB posts are about how you live, which is directly associated to your wealth.
Sweetie, people just don't care about that stuff. Sorry, but they don't. And they are probably laughing at you everytime you post. I promise you, no one cares about your new handbag.
Just went back and looked at my page -
Yesterday I posted a picture of my son at his Martial Arts testing.
There is a post about my DH and I working in the backyard.
I scanned and posted my son's school picture for his grandparents.
I posted a news article and tagged my college aged boys. It was relevant to their degrees.
I posted a couple of links to some neat gardening stuff.
We went to church and out to eat and I posted the name of the Indian restaurant because it was so incredibly good!
My daughter's rowing team traveled to a regatta and I posted the results plus a couple of pictures.
I posted a picture of our family sitting around the fire pit roasting marshmallows last week.
Most of these posts were directly for the benefit of grandparents who live far away. I don't have any friends who post about handbags. The only exotic vacation pictures I care about are the ones that have people in them - and that's what my friends post. I have lots of very wealthy friends. None of them use facebook to make sure the world knows they are wealthy.
Nobody cares about these, either.
Anonymous wrote:12:50 here again. Dh and I went to a fundraising event a few months ago that was pretty expensive. I remember talking to someone who kept going on and on about their trip to Europe and where they stayed and how much the room cost and what it came with etc etc. I couldn't wait to get out of the conversation. You know whose story I was more interested in? My friend who makes about 60K a year and just ran a marathon.
Anonymous wrote:
Honestly, the more glamorous stuff people post on FB, the more I assume that everything else in their life sucks. It's just such a pathetic cry for attention and validation, and someone who was secure and happy wouldn't need to do it.
As far as posting about money stuff on DCUM, I think it's pointless bc so much of it is clearly made up. I myself have made up many things on DCUM over the years. I have been both richer and poorer than I really am, had different numbers and ages of kids, etc. It's totally anonymous, so I take everything with an enormous grain of salt. I basically assume any poster could be a 400-lb 40-year-old man living in his mother's basement. To the extent that the conversation is interesting, I don't really care. But I certainly don't get any "satisfaction" from posting true things about my life. I think it's odd that you seem to need an outlet to talk about your wealth, because you feel FB won't do. Why do you need to broadcast it at all? Why not just enjoy it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the first two responses.
"I'm a 1%er!"
"I come from old money!"
Classic DCUM.
OP, I just figure most are lying because no one with money actually talks about it. Sort of like how a doctor doubled the amount drinks you say you have to get to the truth-- I half what anyone says is the income, at a minimum.
+1!The truly rich don't want/need to advertise it. Quite the opposite.
Anonymous wrote:I love the first two responses.
"I'm a 1%er!"
"I come from old money!"
Classic DCUM.
OP, I just figure most are lying because no one with money actually talks about it. Sort of like how a doctor doubled the amount drinks you say you have to get to the truth-- I half what anyone says is the income, at a minimum.