Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It mattered the first time I was married. My husband grew up pretty low class and I did not. It became an issue when we had kids. I went to boarding school and wanted our son to go as well. It became a huge issue for us. My ex could not understand why I wanted to spend $50K on tuition. Things like that really got in the way. I knew my older son was not ready to go to college and wanted him to do a gap year and travel. Ex husband would have none of that. My son lasted a semester. I understand that even when you grow up in a lower class, you still know what to do, but it was a huge issue for us. I am now engaged to someone who also grew up in a lower class, but was a striver. He had something in him that made him want to be and do better. His kids did really well. While there are some things that I expose him to, it's not as bad and he is open. I also don't care as much since we aren't raising kids together. He is also great about attending all of the events, etc. that I have to go to. He's happy to be along for the ride.
This sounds more like a parenting issue and it was your way or no way. A gap year is absurd. You either get a job and pay rent or go to college. If your son screwed up at school, het gets a job and can go to a local school till he can show he is mature enough to handle school. I wouldn't let mine take a gap year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When did owning a plane/helicopter become UMC?
PP with in-laws with plane. I'm not totally sure what to call them. Yea, I agree, plane and helicopter seem more than UMC. But I feel weird calling my in-laws actually wealthy/upper class because they just don't seem like "wealthy" people somehow. Like, they don't buy art... or like, go to fundraisers for politicans.... Also, fwiw, the helicopter was from a kit....?
I mean I know wealthy AF people who don't even see art. Ever. They spend insane money on Nascar related experiences. Wealthy doesn't always look the same. That said, they aren't the Beverly hillbillies, they travel a lot etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When did owning a plane/helicopter become UMC?
PP with in-laws with plane. I'm not totally sure what to call them. Yea, I agree, plane and helicopter seem more than UMC. But I feel weird calling my in-laws actually wealthy/upper class because they just don't seem like "wealthy" people somehow. Like, they don't buy art... or like, go to fundraisers for politicans.... Also, fwiw, the helicopter was from a kit....?
Anonymous wrote:It mattered the first time I was married. My husband grew up pretty low class and I did not. It became an issue when we had kids. I went to boarding school and wanted our son to go as well. It became a huge issue for us. My ex could not understand why I wanted to spend $50K on tuition. Things like that really got in the way. I knew my older son was not ready to go to college and wanted him to do a gap year and travel. Ex husband would have none of that. My son lasted a semester. I understand that even when you grow up in a lower class, you still know what to do, but it was a huge issue for us. I am now engaged to someone who also grew up in a lower class, but was a striver. He had something in him that made him want to be and do better. His kids did really well. While there are some things that I expose him to, it's not as bad and he is open. I also don't care as much since we aren't raising kids together. He is also great about attending all of the events, etc. that I have to go to. He's happy to be along for the ride.
Anonymous wrote:My wife grew up in a family that had m money but limited education. I grew up in a family that values education and the pursuit of knowledge as the prime directive.
Our DD is following in my footsteps. She thinks her mom is incredibly lazy and shallow (SAHM to a HS student who does no cooking or cleaning).
There are constant conflicts about education vs. socializing. (FWIW, I make decent money, but not big-law money)
Anonymous wrote:My inlaws have more money than my family but we consider them somewhat classless and trashy. DH and his family only ate frozen or canned vegetables. So when we went shopping for produce, he went to the frozen food aisle.
They are really obsessed with money and status. Like the in-laws want the younger kids to marry ivy-league educated people with good jobs. They only believe in going into finance or law, instead of doing something more interesting. They snap their fingers at servers and are bad tippers so it's embarrassing and I always supplement. They do not go to galleries or museums and do not have original art on their walls. They have never attended a ballet or concert.
No kids yet but I can see clashes in education. I want my kids to be multilingual or at least bilingual. I want them to study and find a career that they are passionate about. I want them to eat unprocessed, mostly plant based food. I want them to be less consumerist. I want them to value other people and treat them respectfully. I want them to appreciate and understand the value of art and culture.
Anonymous wrote:I think the Clintons and the Kennedy’s had/have lots of class. They are certainly not in the same category as the Kardashian’s, lol. No comment on the Trumps.
Anonymous wrote:When did owning a plane/helicopter become UMC?
Anonymous wrote:Where did everyone meet their rich S/O..
Did that lead to a perfect set up for marriage?