Unspoken things the ultra-wealthy do | Lifestyle News

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Unspoken things the ultra-wealthy do…

That just screams money.

While most Americans are complaining about today’s wildly high price of residing — others are residing the high life, having experiences and luxuries one might only dream of, if they knew they existed.

To make penny pinchers really feel even worse, a current Reddit post requested customers to record things that wealthy people do that most people have never heard of. Nearly 5,000 people ran to the remark part, chatting about all the pieces from swans swimming in a yard pool to having customized libraries in their properties.

Here are some of the eye-rolling feedback from the thread.

Having a pool is a luxurious for most; requesting swans float around in it’s one thing else.

“I know a billionaire who wanted swans swimming in the pond outside his home, but was disappointed when their feathers molted and they looked scruffy. He uses a swan rental service that rotates out the swans periodically so that they always look pristine,” one commenter wrote.

Not having the ability to keep a plant alive isn’t one thing the higher class ever has to fear about, as they’ll ship their plants out to be taken care of.

“Orchid daycare. You send your non-blooming orchid in to be taken care of until it blooms again, and exchange it for a blooming one so you always have blooming orchids in your house,” somebody identified.

Your average individual has a simple bookshelf in their home to store read books. The wealthy? They have customized libraries.

The thread identified all the stunning things wealthy people have access to. Kzenon – stock.adobe.com

“For the absurdly rich who want a classic library with leather-bound books that simply aren’t available in leather binding, there are companies that will curate a collection based on your tastes, print out books on premium non-acidic paper, and bind them all to match, or fit a particular theme,” a consumer shared. “The service typically starts in the mid-6 figures.”

Yes, money is certainly important — but so is a wealthy individual’s time.

“When I was in college working at the Business School we had an event and hosted a Fortune 500 company CEO. In the afternoon after his visit, we hired a very expensive limo company to pick him up, and they were 35 minutes late. The CEO’s travel dept in another state was calling us during this episode and later asked us to blacklist that vendor should the CEO ever come back to town,” a commenter wrote. “I was in the office the next day to hear my boss yelling at the owner of the limo service and demanding a refund, explaining that the CEO’s lost time was worth more than we make in a year.”

Trying to get a youngster into a good college is a fear for many mother and father. Yet, the 1% can merely rent instructional brokers for their youngsters.

This is what we got here right here for… never heard of it,” a remark in the thread read. standret – stock.adobe.com

“They send those agents across the world to private school fairs and their job is to match the kid (who can be as young as 10) profile with the best school available that matches what the family wants. Each agents have a portfolio of kids and they get a commission from the schools when they match a kid with them,” a remark read.

Forget going to the store to select one thing for your home — the uber-rich let the purchasing come to them.

“I went to an amazing Miami penthouse once that had multiple staircases brought in so the previous owner could pick which they liked best. It was insane.”

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