con1421 wrote: » Those with the money become ignorant with little personality and they simply don't look at life in the same way that others would. You are simply worthless in their eyes.
con1421 wrote: » I can't stand misers and distance myself from those who judge people based on the size of their wallets
Sir Digby Chicken Caesar wrote: » hrm....
Pinklady11 wrote: » I know one guy who is a millionaire. He made his fortune by selling loads of land in the good times after his father past away. He has homes all over the world and is regularly seen driving his Lamborghini around the local town. BUT he is a self obsessed nut job! The last girl he dated dumped him and he stalked her for months after. I always found him to be odd, and difficult to make conversation with on the few occasions I was in his company. To be honest I'd rather be a poor "normal" person with good friends than a rich nut job who nobody really likes.
mikemac1 wrote: » Any retail worker has met the well to do, middle class women out spending her husbands money and sneering at low paid staff
shopaholic01 wrote: » Typical 'new money attitude', people born into wealth are usually much more down to earth and often look and live like they don't have a pot to piss in.
Madam_X wrote: » I've found the opposite too though. People born into extreme privilege thinking that's the way it is for everyone else and not having a clue. And people who are self-made rich people never forgetting where they came from or the slog it took to get them where they are. They tend to instill that attitude into their kids too.
seenitall wrote: » I have a friend who is a trust fund "baby" (not really a baby!:D). Millions on the bank, never worked a day in his life, just dabbles in property speculation as the mood strikes. He's very on-alert about money, though. You wouldn't have thought it from his circumstances, but I think that he does to some extent measure his worth by his money. I think he's improved over the years, though. Travels for fun a lot, spends his winters wherever the climate is warmer, takes self-improvement courses and similar all the time. Dresses normally, really down-to-earth etc, but he does have a very care-free, extremely relaxed attitude to most things (other than money!). Which is refreshing in a friend. There is an a boyishness to him, understandable in someone who never faced the responsibilities most people face in their lifetime (jobs, marriages, mortgages, kids). But overall, a good friend.
seenitall wrote: » A self-made millionaire I used to know, though, was a different story. Inflexible, authoritarian, insecure, immature control freak. A thoroughly perplexing and unpleasant individual. Issues. I wonder if any of his 'difficult' traits have helped him in business?
shopaholic01 wrote: » Is he single?
seenitall wrote: » He is. I'm afraid though, that his boyishness extends to being very picky about women, although he's no Brad Pitt himself, ya know (hopefully he'll never read this! ), which may account for his single status as well... that's all I'm gonna say, not fair to 'advertise' him like this!
shopaholic01 wrote: » Well I'm gorgeous, so no problem there! :cool::p
Arpa wrote: » I think it tends to be the nouveau riche who are the tossers. People who have worked hard or inherited don't seem to view it as a status thing