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Search resuls for: "Hokemeyer"


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Four therapists shared what their clients on different incomes discuss in sessions. Money can be a source of stress for both those on lower incomes as well as the ultra-rich. HENRYsSome HENRYs (High Earners, Not Rich Yet) might seem wealthy to others, but still worry about having enough money, Williams said, because "it's all relative." Two HENRYs in a couple, meanwhile, might want to discuss tension in their relationship if they have different ways of thinking about shared wealth, she said. And, as people live longer, she said that some worry about not having enough money to sustain their lifestyles as they get older.
Persons: , Anna Nathanson, Nathanson, Getty, Ashley Castro, It's, ALICEs, Tracy Williams, Williams, HIFIs HIFIs, HIFIs, Rich, Ricardo Mendoza Garbayo, Castro, Paul L, Johannes Mann, Hokemeyer Organizations: Service Locations: ALICEs, HENRYs, , New York, Atlanta, Colorado
While wealth can bring with it some unconventional problems — such as being denied an invite-only Ferrari and accidentally destroying swathes of coral reefs with a 300-foot yacht — most other problems that the rich face may not be as esoteric as we think. They dismiss rich people's mental health concerns as insignificant and of diminished importance," Paul Hokemeyer, a clinical psychotherapist who treats the ultra rich, told CNBC. Paranoia and distrustWealth can cause people around the super rich to view them as objects, Hokemeyer observed. People who are rich tend to be of higher social status, and those who live in diminished states of power are often drawn to them. Against this backdrop, the super rich tend to become more suspicious of people's motives in associating with them.
Persons: Ferrari, Paul Hokemeyer, Amanda Falkson, Maria Korneeva Organizations: CNBC, Drayson, Psychotherapy Locations: Drayson Mews
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