I Grew Up Rich — 5 Ways It’s Changed My View of Money

kate_sept2004 / Getty Images
kate_sept2004 / Getty Images

Christine Landis graduated magna cum laude as a member of the prestigious Phi Beta Kappa collegiate honor society from the University of Southern California with a degree in business and managerial economics. After seven years of corporate ladder-climbing, she spent eight years as the CEO of a global fintech company, which she sold for eight figures in 2018.

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The millions she earned from the sale of her company allowed her to retire at 36, but early retirement didn’t suit her. She soon returned to the business world to launch her passion project, Peacock Parent, a platform she uses to help parents manage their time, their households and their schedules in a way that maximizes quality time with their children.

Although she’s now a millionaire several times over, wealth is not a new experience for Landis. Her affluent childhood — and her parents’ money-management philosophy — provided the foundation for her success and her commitment to spending her hours as cautiously as her cash.
My upper-class upbringing definitely shaped how I view time and money as an adult,” she said.

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Rich on Paper, but Not in Daily Life

Landis grew up with two highly accomplished professional parents. Her mother owned her own business and her father was an oral maxillofacial surgeon — but their lifestyle did not outwardly exude wealth.

“I always thought of our family as middle class because of the way we lived our lives,” she said. “But now, as an adult, I understand that we had more money than I realized. It might be more appropriate to say that we had upper-class money but lived within middle-class means.”

She Dipped Her Toes in the Good Life — While Wearing Payless Shoes

Landis’s parents neither deprived her nor over-indulged her.

“First-class tickets, private drivers and personal stylists were not a part of how I grew up,” she said. “We lived in a nice neighborhood in a 5,000-square-foot home, traveled out of the country once a year during the summer and annually to Hawaii, but never flew first class. We always carried our own luggage and used public transportation to get everywhere. We shopped at our local Vons and would buy clothes from the exchange military base or go to the mall to visit Payless Shoes.”

Despite the public transportation and bargain footwear, Landis experienced glimmers of what most Americans would consider upper-crust affluence.