Anonymous wrote:Consumerism at it’s best. Shame on all of you.
Anonymous wrote:The Ninja Creami and the shark hair tool from Costco were my teen daughters' favorite gifts this Christmas.
And if anything goes wrong with them we can take advantage of their kick-ass return policy!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never bought anyone a gift from Costco. Different class/wealth circles, I suspect.
When I was teaching at a boarding school in the UK, I had a student who was a titled aristocrat. She was literally a "Lady."
I bought her mother a hot water bottle she found at a local grocery store for Christmas. At her family Christmas, her parents gave her a set of cooking items from Amazon (not particularly high end) and a large gift card to Asos, which is a cheap, fast-fashion online platform UK kids use to buy (cheap, fast-fashion) clothes. The girl loved Asos and that was what she wore on weekends/non-uniform times: cheap polyester fast-fashion items, and she just threw stuff away instead of laundering anything, since as she observed, "It just falls apart if you try to wash it one time." Another teacher remarked that the girl "looks homeless" sometimes, which was accurate. Friendly, intelligent, popular girl with zero regard or care for "status items" or concern with what anything she did signalled about her social class, because, well, nothing she did or said or wore had any impact on her social class.
We had two other aristocrat families (as in, actual titled aristocrats), and they and their parents put zero effort into fashion or clothing at all. One mother (titled aristocrat) wore a tattered sweater with a small hole in the shoulder one Friday when she came to pick up her son for the weekend, and rubber wellies. Their car was covered with mud.
My experience with them changed my understanding of what "old money" looks like. They truly do not care about impressing anyone. Sometimes they look almost deliberately shabby.
It's one of the reasons Costco is so successful. There are a BUNCH of well off people who don't care about impressing anyone. They're happy with something that is total junk, but also not paying extra for some high end name brand that's marginally better than the next option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never bought anyone a gift from Costco. Different class/wealth circles, I suspect.
When I was teaching at a boarding school in the UK, I had a student who was a titled aristocrat. She was literally a "Lady."
I bought her mother a hot water bottle she found at a local grocery store for Christmas. At her family Christmas, her parents gave her a set of cooking items from Amazon (not particularly high end) and a large gift card to Asos, which is a cheap, fast-fashion online platform UK kids use to buy (cheap, fast-fashion) clothes. The girl loved Asos and that was what she wore on weekends/non-uniform times: cheap polyester fast-fashion items, and she just threw stuff away instead of laundering anything, since as she observed, "It just falls apart if you try to wash it one time." Another teacher remarked that the girl "looks homeless" sometimes, which was accurate. Friendly, intelligent, popular girl with zero regard or care for "status items" or concern with what anything she did signalled about her social class, because, well, nothing she did or said or wore had any impact on her social class.
We had two other aristocrat families (as in, actual titled aristocrats), and they and their parents put zero effort into fashion or clothing at all. One mother (titled aristocrat) wore a tattered sweater with a small hole in the shoulder one Friday when she came to pick up her son for the weekend, and rubber wellies. Their car was covered with mud.
My experience with them changed my understanding of what "old money" looks like. They truly do not care about impressing anyone. Sometimes they look almost deliberately shabby.
It's one of the reasons Costco is so successful. There are a BUNCH of well off people who don't care about impressing anyone. They're happy with something that is total junk, but also not paying extra for some high end name brand that's marginally better than the next option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never bought anyone a gift from Costco. Different class/wealth circles, I suspect.
When I was teaching at a boarding school in the UK, I had a student who was a titled aristocrat. She was literally a "Lady."
I bought her mother a hot water bottle she found at a local grocery store for Christmas. At her family Christmas, her parents gave her a set of cooking items from Amazon (not particularly high end) and a large gift card to Asos, which is a cheap, fast-fashion online platform UK kids use to buy (cheap, fast-fashion) clothes. The girl loved Asos and that was what she wore on weekends/non-uniform times: cheap polyester fast-fashion items, and she just threw stuff away instead of laundering anything, since as she observed, "It just falls apart if you try to wash it one time." Another teacher remarked that the girl "looks homeless" sometimes, which was accurate. Friendly, intelligent, popular girl with zero regard or care for "status items" or concern with what anything she did signalled about her social class, because, well, nothing she did or said or wore had any impact on her social class.
We had two other aristocrat families (as in, actual titled aristocrats), and they and their parents put zero effort into fashion or clothing at all. One mother (titled aristocrat) wore a tattered sweater with a small hole in the shoulder one Friday when she came to pick up her son for the weekend, and rubber wellies. Their car was covered with mud.
My experience with them changed my understanding of what "old money" looks like. They truly do not care about impressing anyone. Sometimes they look almost deliberately shabby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you even know it’s a Costco gift? They don’t give out bags and all the chocolate is not branded Costco.
Oh, how lovely, a box of 156 Ferraro roches! Wait, what’s that? You say you got it at Costco? I would have never guessed!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MIL was upset my BIL and kids brought her items from Costco.
So ungrateful. I don’t mind them. Chocolate is chocolate
I don’t mind gifts from Costco. However, chocolate is not chocolate.
Good chocolate is worth it. Bad chocolate should be thrown out uneaten.
Don’t be a POS. If you don’t want the new-in-box chocolate because it isn’t expensive enough, take the time to gift it to people who will eat it.
Anonymous wrote:How do you even know it’s a Costco gift? They don’t give out bags and all the chocolate is not branded Costco.
Anonymous wrote:How do you even know it’s a Costco gift? They don’t give out bags and all the chocolate is not branded Costco.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never bought anyone a gift from Costco. Different class/wealth circles, I suspect.
When I was teaching at a boarding school in the UK, I had a student who was a titled aristocrat. She was literally a "Lady."
I bought her mother a hot water bottle she found at a local grocery store for Christmas. At her family Christmas, her parents gave her a set of cooking items from Amazon (not particularly high end) and a large gift card to Asos, which is a cheap, fast-fashion online platform UK kids use to buy (cheap, fast-fashion) clothes. The girl loved Asos and that was what she wore on weekends/non-uniform times: cheap polyester fast-fashion items, and she just threw stuff away instead of laundering anything, since as she observed, "It just falls apart if you try to wash it one time." Another teacher remarked that the girl "looks homeless" sometimes, which was accurate. Friendly, intelligent, popular girl with zero regard or care for "status items" or concern with what anything she did signalled about her social class, because, well, nothing she did or said or wore had any impact on her social class.
We had two other aristocrat families (as in, actual titled aristocrats), and they and their parents put zero effort into fashion or clothing at all. One mother (titled aristocrat) wore a tattered sweater with a small hole in the shoulder one Friday when she came to pick up her son for the weekend, and rubber wellies. Their car was covered with mud.
My experience with them changed my understanding of what "old money" looks like. They truly do not care about impressing anyone. Sometimes they look almost deliberately shabby.
Anonymous wrote:I've never bought anyone a gift from Costco. Different class/wealth circles, I suspect.