Here is the gist of the comment I left over at
Income is not a great gauge of class by itself. Net worth matters a LOT.
Have you read The Millionaire Next Door? One of the main themes is that some professionals with high incomes believe that appearing wealthy is an important part of their professional reputation. So they have big houses, expensive cars and clothes, and are deep in debt. Some rich people think it's important to save money, so they have lots of assets but they don't live in fancy houses, drive beat-up cars, etc. (The book is rather simplistic in its judgements but I agree that those patterns exist.)
Those rich folks and professionals might have similar gross incomes. But are they the same class?
They are defining "middle class" where I live as a household income of $68,420—$107,815.
They're counting it as the middle fifth of income, which means they're assuming five classes. One wonders what the results would be like if they took the middle third of income (I suspect the results would be more boring, although I'm sure some people would define themselves as middle class when they aren't in the middle third of income).
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Date: 31 Dec 2014 04:18 am (UTC)Stricter/more focused/less distracted schooling might've made the difference back when I was still in my more formative time (and therefore, might've made me a more successful person now), but I would've missed out on a few good times and key people at non-blender school, and maybe some achievements I managed to pull off later on (like, becoming copy editor of my school paper along with storyboard layout person and opinion article writer was mind-blowing enough to everybody, believe me, since I was like, destined for exactly nothing but failure a few years before that) but maybe I could've done even more at blender school, or maybe I would've done exactly nothing at all. There's no way to know, really, without having been able to just go and get it done.
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Date: 31 Dec 2014 08:53 pm (UTC)Hey, give the shared brain back when you're done with it! :D
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Date: 31 Dec 2014 11:28 pm (UTC)It's when there's something else beyond those needs that I have to push for to get it done that my inertia sets in; then everything else in the world becomes more important and can most easily distract me (this is from my dad, who was like "Whoa, squirrel!" personified, he could not keep his mind on anything less than three things at once, and he never wanted to, and he was extremely ambitious and at least moderately successful at what he did, overall).
So you combine those two and you get me and people think I have like, ADD, because of all the combined traits but I don't. Though sometimes I think just treating myself like I do would not hurt, regardless. :)
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Date: 31 Dec 2014 11:38 pm (UTC)I think in my case the lack of motivation is partly depression, because when I'm better medicated, the "nothing is that important" part is not so all-encompassing — I'm more likely to find projects I'm interested in.