Classism at work? - /adv/ (#33207495) [Archived: 1798 hours ago]

Anonymous
6/12/2025, 12:24:20 PM No.33207495
IMG_0496
IMG_0496
md5: 4277cabeb9fac95e977f2e9cfa1bf38a🔍
Now I’ve always been super social - I went to so many house parties, clubs, races, met girls etc.

I started 3 months ago as a consultant in a big, globally known accounting company. All other grads in my team are extremely rich - I went to a public school, live in an average neighbourhood, drive a regular car etc. All they do is talk about their rich stuff the watches (like once one of them said to me ‘I can’t believe someone would wear an Apple Watch’ when I tried to join the convo about their watches, I wear one) and CEO connections, exclusive sports memberships and their trips with their long term girlfriends (never managed to keep a girl for more than 2 dates pretty much). Like I can’t contribute much if they’re just talking about how they got lunch with famous footballers they went to high school with on the weekend.

Now they just started kinda leaving me out in teams group chats, at lunch and Friday drinks - which makes sense since I don’t have too much in common to talk about with them, but it’s kinda depressing when they all go to and ask everyone individually EXCEPT ME.

What do I do? I really don’t like feeling alone like this at work and it’s making so self conscious no matter how hard I try. Might want to add I’m the youngest there, they’re all 24-25 and I just turned 21
Replies: >>33207694 >>33208479
Anonymous
6/12/2025, 1:57:09 PM No.33207694
>>33207495 (OP)
I won't read threads by ZOG corporate social climbers. Hopefully, the next economic collapse will take you down and you'll be back in mom's basement just like your Chinese counterparts right now.
Anonymous
6/12/2025, 5:37:06 PM No.33208479
>>33207495 (OP)
Learn this: THEY ARE LYING or at least exaggerating like crazy. It's like teenagers bragging about their sex lives.

They are all playing a game called "I will pretend to believe you if you pretend to believe me, and so we'll both feel good about our precarious junior-executive lives."

Play along.