Hi, Cary --
In a nutshell, the problem is that my three best friends have all inherited substantial money in the past two years. My husband and I have no hope of ever again being their financial equals.
And I'm jealous as hell. So jealous, I don't really want to talk to them. Their conversations seem to be all about their new houses, their trips, their toys, and things I can never hope to have.
These three are all my best friends -- friends of over 30 years whom I went to school with. We danced at each other's weddings and laughed through college and adulthood together. They have been dear friends and a source of comfort and joy. But I just can't relate to their new problems (how hard it is to find a good cleaning lady, the price of a designer handbag, yada yada).
We're not "working poor" -- we're probably in the middle of the middle class -- but suddenly they've leapt up several notches in net worth, and it depresses me to know I'll never be there.
I can't really afford to lose three good friends, but I hate the jealousy I feel every time we visit any of them or they visit us. What's my solution? Is there one? They are not rubbing my nose in it -- I am.
Jealous of the Newly Rich
Dear Jealous,
If we're just fine, if we're just as good as the next person, then why should we care if someone has something we don't have?
And if we're not fine, what's wrong? What do we need to be content in our own lives?
You probably can't force the heavens to rain money on you. But you can use this opportunity to look at your own life and ask what you can do to make your own life so satisfying that you don't care about other people and their inherited wealth.
So what do you need? What is missing in your own life? Really. I mean, sure, maybe it's the Audi sports car that you think is missing. But what is that about? Is it about excitement and fun? Is it about the feeling of being admired? Do you crave the sensual feel of luxury upholstery?
Once you can identify the actual cravings, you can find those things in experience. You don't need to own an expensive luxury sports car to enjoy some of its qualities. If your friends have acquired expensive luxury sports cars, you can ask them to drive you around. They probably would be happy to do that. Then you can feel the expensively sure and quiet click of the glove compartment and know that you are in the presence of the world's finest engineering -- unless the glove compartment is locked, perhaps because it contains diamonds, or a gun, or both. Then you can enjoy the thought of what is hidden in the glove compartment of the expensive luxury sports car belonging to your old friend who has just inherited quite a bit of money.
Or maybe what is missing is a sense of security. Maybe it grinds you down to have to work so hard, not knowing where the next rent check will come from, wondering how you will maintain your own comfortable existence into old age.
These are real concerns. They are what our lives are made of. They are worth thinking about.
In this way you can allow your friends' good fortune to enrich your own life, without having to pay the insurance premiums or the inheritance taxes.
Your desires are real and legitimate. You would be wise to pursue their satisfaction. But your jealousy is a perversion of those desires, based in a belief that you can't have what you want, and that the world is unfair, and you are unloved.
Jealousy is different from desire. Desires can be satisfied. Jealousy involves a painful, grinding feeling of unworthiness. When I'm jealous and it leads to depression, that's because I feel things are hopeless: I'll never have what they have, hence I'll never be happy or loved.
In jealousy we sense injustice: Why should that jerk have a boat? He doesn't deserve it! If a person worked hard all his life and finally bought a boat, would we be jealous? Probably not. But if his rich mother bought him a boat and he appeared on deck in his captain's hat and blazer, knowing nothing about maintenance or navigation, we might feel a murderous twinge.
We have no control over who inherits what. But we do have some control over our own lives, and how we treat our own psyches.
The cure is to know that we are loved, and to forgive ourselves for our shortcomings. Not having wealth is not a shortcoming. But obsessing over it is. So we forgive ourselves, and we remind ourselves of our own worth.
If I told you to write, "I'm Good Enough, I'm Smart Enough, and Doggone It, People Like Me!" on your bathroom mirror like that "Saturday Night Live" character Stuart Smalley, it might send you into a real suicidal depression. We have to maintain some dignity! But if you are honest about the things you enjoy, and if you pursue them, and if you give yourself the pleasures you deserve, and if you allow yourself to plot secretly to acquire the pleasures that only you know you want, then you can live a fairly happy life without inheriting millions of dollars.
Self-esteem does not mean self-satisfaction. It isn't egotism. It is love. And it must come with humility. That means loving ourselves as we are, with our shortcomings.
So my wish for you would be that you change your attitude to one of grateful amazement that your friends could have such good fortune.
Well, maybe that's a tall order.
OK, how about this:
My wish for you would be that you can continue to love your friends and forgive them for their newfound and boring interest in the challenges of maintaining mundane comforts, and that you would get to the point where can say to them, "Enough talk about the perils and misfortunes of inherited wealth; now let's grill some ribs."
Preserve the friendship by being open but lighthearted about this. It's a touchy subject, and it may happen that at times your true feelings show a little. But that's OK. As long as you don't belabor it. Like, don't get into a long self-justifying drunken spiel about how your friends have become insufferable since they got a little dough. Just rib them about it and maintain your own dignity.
In other words, stop rubbing your own nose in it.
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