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DARE TO ASK: Does money shelter you from reality?

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

For middle-class to rich people: Do you feel you’ve missed out on the genuine experience of life by being sheltered by your money? And do you think poor people are more “real” than you?

Amber, lower class, Arkansas

Replies

Our loved ones can get killed, our children can do drugs and our lives can fall to pieces, just like yours.

Mary, 29, middle class, Philadelphia

As soon as my dad got a high-paying job, our family became torn apart. Lots of possessions and the greater living space caused envy, greed and fighting.

Brianna, Glendora, Calif.

I don’t think I’ve missed out on anything. I think “close” poor families and “dysfunctional” wealthy families are stereotypes. I have a loving family and I can shop at Bloomingdale’s.

Victoria, 15, upper class, Scranton, Pa.

Grandpa died a few years back and left me $30,000. I didn’t worry about groceries, bought the piano I wanted, paid for college, but never got [lucky] during this time. Been poor: living off credit cards and minimum wage, wondering how to pay for food, staying home ’cause of no money, and never got [lucky]. Bottom line: rich is better … and I don’t get [lucky] much.

Chris, 34, middle class, Va.

Poorer people are braver. I missed out on lighting candles in the house and calling it a candle party when you can’t pay the electric bill, or going to the park instead of a movie because you can’t afford a movie. We can’t ever understand what their lives are like, and they couldn’t ever dream of ours.

Sarah, Zeeland, Mich.

Perhaps “the school of hard knocks” imparts valuable lessons, but too often its students never graduate.

Warren, 38, Schererville, Ind.

Expert says

People from old money can be more insulated from “reality” than the nouveau riche — folks who’ve recently come into the green by hard work, says Jacksonville psychologist Gary Buffone, author of Choking on the Silver Spoon (Simplon Press).

“Research shows there are a lot of millionaires and you’d never recognize them — they drive older autos, they’re not in mansions — because a lot of their wealth is earned, not given. So they came through life much like the average Joe … they struggled, worked hard and saved to get where they are.”

Moneyed parents can fall into the trap of wanting a better life for their kids and then overprotecting them, he said.

“They keep them in private schools, don’t expose them to a broader cross-section of the populace, provide for all their needs, buy their cars and clothes for them.”

The privileged life doesn’t always add up to the good life, he noted. “I had a client who inherited millions. Until then he was hard-working, your typical kid. But it turned his life upside-down. He couldn’t stay in college, didn’t stick with a job, because he didn’t have to. It can rob an adult kid of motivation and led to depression. There’s a darker side.”

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