rightkindofme
Diamond Member
This is going to sound really weird and some people are probably going to think, "Poor little rich girl, shut up." I can live with that.
With that introduction, I am currently really financially privileged. This is weird for me. I grew up very poor. I have a lot of poor-people habits. I appear poor to the people around me. Folks are constantly offering me charity (like clothing that doesn't have holes in it) or trying to "help" me have access to things. This is kind of weird to deal with. "No, actually I don't want your cast-off tv. I don't have one because I do not choose to have one not because I can't afford one."
These conversations get really weird.
I live most of the time like a very poor person. I am 33 and I'm still wearing clothes I had in middle school. I've worn them through two pregnancies. I don't buy new/nice vehicles. I spend a lot of time at home gardening so I can learn about growing food. I don't wear jewelry (other than my wedding ring) or makeup. So most people in the community (I'm really social as I walk around our neighborhood) think of me as kind of a charity case. It's really weird. They think that because I walk to the farmers market for my groceries that I need help.
I try to tactfully tell them that I don't need food donations. (Actually we donate hundreds of dollars a month to various charities. But thanks for thinking of me!)
It's uncomfortable. But I don't feel comfortable in clothes and external markers that would cause people to treat me like I'm of a higher social rank.
Except my wedding ring. Which I had custom made in New York City at my husband's insistence. If I walk into Tiffany's jewelry store the folks who work there look at my ring and hiss in their breath and say, "That's real".
So I have these very weird very intense opposite experiences. And both of them cause me to feel wildly uncomfortable.
I have started businesses and I've done angel investing through a venture capitol firm. Many people who are actually mega-rich know who I am. They stop and listen when I talk. It is... very disconcerting to me.
When I deal with rich, influential, "powerful" (oh gag me with a spoon) people I tend to go home and feel like I should cut myself to ribbons because I am not good enough to be going there. Any second they are going to find out that I'm bad and stupid and a whore and they will start thinking that they should beat me too and....
So my life involves a lot of plummeting up and down the emotional spectrum. On one hand, I have external validation in the form of a rapidly growing investment portfolio (I turned ~$150k of assets into $1.3million in 8 years) that I do actually know what I'm talking about with money. I do make good guesses and choices and decisions. Clearly. But I still have all these horrible tapes playing in my head at full volume. I shouldn't be talking to these men about money I should be sucking their ####. I don't have the right to speak. I should shut up.
I put this in discussion because I couldn't figure out where this would fit. It's about self-concept and how you change how you view yourself.
I'm saying all this because I want to explain where I'm coming from and why this is really weird for me.
What I want to ask and then discuss is: how do you figure out who you are and what you are worth? I don't think my bank balance is very important in the overall discussion of my value as a human being. I think it is a demonstration that I am skilled at handling money.... which isn't the same thing as having value as a human being. Let's go look at Wall Street.
So what things do matter? How do you reconcile massive changes in social experience in life? I grew up in extreme poverty. I was homeless and I stole food to keep from starving to death. I have a fierce need to be safe and I'm very lucky that I have been able to figure out how to invest money such that I'm likely to be safe for the rest of my life. I'm even luckier I married someone who had a nest egg who was happy to say, "I trust you to handle the money."
But I don't feel safe. It feels like it is just stupid money. It doesn't matter. I don't have an extended family so if something bad happens all I have is... money. Who gives a @#%@?
So the money is part of it, and it makes it very complicated. But it's not really about money. How do you decide who you are? How safe you are? What you need for safety?
How do I feel less scared all the darn time?
With that introduction, I am currently really financially privileged. This is weird for me. I grew up very poor. I have a lot of poor-people habits. I appear poor to the people around me. Folks are constantly offering me charity (like clothing that doesn't have holes in it) or trying to "help" me have access to things. This is kind of weird to deal with. "No, actually I don't want your cast-off tv. I don't have one because I do not choose to have one not because I can't afford one."
These conversations get really weird.
I live most of the time like a very poor person. I am 33 and I'm still wearing clothes I had in middle school. I've worn them through two pregnancies. I don't buy new/nice vehicles. I spend a lot of time at home gardening so I can learn about growing food. I don't wear jewelry (other than my wedding ring) or makeup. So most people in the community (I'm really social as I walk around our neighborhood) think of me as kind of a charity case. It's really weird. They think that because I walk to the farmers market for my groceries that I need help.
I try to tactfully tell them that I don't need food donations. (Actually we donate hundreds of dollars a month to various charities. But thanks for thinking of me!)
It's uncomfortable. But I don't feel comfortable in clothes and external markers that would cause people to treat me like I'm of a higher social rank.
Except my wedding ring. Which I had custom made in New York City at my husband's insistence. If I walk into Tiffany's jewelry store the folks who work there look at my ring and hiss in their breath and say, "That's real".
So I have these very weird very intense opposite experiences. And both of them cause me to feel wildly uncomfortable.
I have started businesses and I've done angel investing through a venture capitol firm. Many people who are actually mega-rich know who I am. They stop and listen when I talk. It is... very disconcerting to me.
When I deal with rich, influential, "powerful" (oh gag me with a spoon) people I tend to go home and feel like I should cut myself to ribbons because I am not good enough to be going there. Any second they are going to find out that I'm bad and stupid and a whore and they will start thinking that they should beat me too and....
So my life involves a lot of plummeting up and down the emotional spectrum. On one hand, I have external validation in the form of a rapidly growing investment portfolio (I turned ~$150k of assets into $1.3million in 8 years) that I do actually know what I'm talking about with money. I do make good guesses and choices and decisions. Clearly. But I still have all these horrible tapes playing in my head at full volume. I shouldn't be talking to these men about money I should be sucking their ####. I don't have the right to speak. I should shut up.
I put this in discussion because I couldn't figure out where this would fit. It's about self-concept and how you change how you view yourself.
I'm saying all this because I want to explain where I'm coming from and why this is really weird for me.
What I want to ask and then discuss is: how do you figure out who you are and what you are worth? I don't think my bank balance is very important in the overall discussion of my value as a human being. I think it is a demonstration that I am skilled at handling money.... which isn't the same thing as having value as a human being. Let's go look at Wall Street.
So what things do matter? How do you reconcile massive changes in social experience in life? I grew up in extreme poverty. I was homeless and I stole food to keep from starving to death. I have a fierce need to be safe and I'm very lucky that I have been able to figure out how to invest money such that I'm likely to be safe for the rest of my life. I'm even luckier I married someone who had a nest egg who was happy to say, "I trust you to handle the money."
But I don't feel safe. It feels like it is just stupid money. It doesn't matter. I don't have an extended family so if something bad happens all I have is... money. Who gives a @#%@?
So the money is part of it, and it makes it very complicated. But it's not really about money. How do you decide who you are? How safe you are? What you need for safety?
How do I feel less scared all the darn time?