Sometimes when my daughter realizes that she is on the point of getting seriously upset about something monumentally trivial, she smiles brightly and says, "White girl problem!"
Which I like very much, also in the variation I've overheard a couple of times, "First-world problem."
How is one to respond to the story in today's Times headlined,
Luckily, there are consultants to help you through it all, as well as a book, by Roy Williams and Vic Preisser, Preparing Heirs: Five Steps to a Successful Transition of Family Wealth and Values (Robert Reed Publishers, 2003). Or there are special therapists, according to Mother Jones, "wealth psychologists", who can assist in pulling you through.
And for the rest of you, sleep, well, adding yet another to the list of problems you don't expect to have.
Which I like very much, also in the variation I've overheard a couple of times, "First-world problem."
How is one to respond to the story in today's Times headlined,
What to Tell the Children About Their Inheritance and When
For the rest of us, inheritors seem like a democracy’s version of royalty: born into a world of privilege we would love to know. Yet the inheritors I spoke to said they were ill equipped to handle the windfall and found that it quickly made them feel separate from their peers.For example,
Jason Franklin, now 32, said he received a call from his grandfather’s secretary asking if he wanted to serve on the board of the family foundation. He was 21 at the time, and up until that point, he said he thought his parents were just affluent professionals like his friends’ parents. The invitation prompted questions.
So he had to go out and buy some new friends, right away, and they didn't have any in the right sizes. No, that's mean. Similarly,“If your family has enough money to create a family foundation, that means you have to ask about issues of wealth,” said Mr. Franklin, who works for a philanthropic consultancy. “It caused me to really pause. The reaction I was getting from my friends — it was isolating and confusing.”
When Naomi Sobel learned at 20 that she would receive a large inheritance, she said she knew it was a lot of money, and for her, too, it raised questions about a house: would it be enough to buy one? She laughs at this today, since it would have paid for many, many homes.
Heh heh indeed, that's a scream.“I have enough money that I don’t ever have to work,” said Ms. Sobel, now 28.
Luckily, there are consultants to help you through it all, as well as a book, by Roy Williams and Vic Preisser, Preparing Heirs: Five Steps to a Successful Transition of Family Wealth and Values (Robert Reed Publishers, 2003). Or there are special therapists, according to Mother Jones, "wealth psychologists", who can assist in pulling you through.
And for the rest of you, sleep, well, adding yet another to the list of problems you don't expect to have.
Photo from The L Magazine. |