Family class?

My background would make me working class. My wife's background would make her middle class. If I were pushed I'd consider my wife and I middle class but really this is coming from the lifestyle we can afford and the property we own rather than any real understanding of what middle class means these days, if it means anything at all which I suspect it doesn't other than to 1st year Sociology students.

As an aside, it's a very British way to think of people and is both limiting and entirely useless.
 
276911_237855876235524_154185_n.jpg
 
That's interesting, like what?

She thought I was a snob, took the mickey out of my accent, where I shopped for my clothes, where I lived, my peer group, my food tastes. She said my schooling was overpriviliged and biased and my political views underinformed and bigoted. For starters.
 
Parents were both from a council estate, got themselves off it, they own there own home and have good jobs, infact all my grandparents kids have done this.

Me and my cousin went uni, he has a PHD and is a headteacher, I have a BSc & have a good job, good pay and conditions, I consider myself working class with an eye on middle class.

I still need to work to pay bills and have a holiday, buy gadgets, pay rent.

Is the class system still relevant in today's society? Does it even exist any more?

I see Britain today only has two real major fractions in society, the mega poverty stricken benefit/minimum wage generation and the rest of us.

That is the major issue with Britain today.
 
She thought I was a snob, took the mickey out of my accent, where I shopped for my clothes, where I lived, my peer group, my food tastes. She said my schooling was overpriviliged and biased and my political views underinformed and bigoted. For starters.
Was she right? :D (j/k :p)
 
I can imagine (from both points of view), strongly different political views don't often work in a relationship.

Very true. I've been with another girl for over two years now and we share very similar political, traditional views. It does really help because it bleeds into so many other areas which would otherwise become points of issue.
 
She wasn't totally wrong, no. But you can see how that would cause no end of problems in a relationship.

That isn't even a relationship. You're describing someone who actively dislikes you and everything you represent but is somehow still with you (was with you). What did you think of her? Did you dislike her as much as she disliked you?
 
Back
Top Bottom