You may rather starve, but would your kids? |
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I don’t get the pride thing.
Were you too proud to take maternity leave? Too proud to take that mortgage deduction? Too proud to claim your child tax credit? Alimony is no different, to me. Alimony protects women. And until the day that being a single mom means you earn and have more- or even equal- to a single dad or two family home- I’m okay with it. It’s not like alimony is making women rich. The man is as complicit as the woman. Where was his pride when he took advantage of his wife’s free labor, built his career, and moved along? |
This is a situation where obviously she should get life long alimony. My husband's ex cheated on him, left him for the affair partner (moved out one day while he was at work cross-country taking the kids). In her case, she should have gotten child support only as she made the choice to move to her boyfriend and let him support her (which he did by default not paying his child support and letting his kids suffer - his ex also had a SN child). I think it really depends on the situation. |
Not at all. Married once, still with same person. It’s single when we met. But whatever makes you feel better! |
Any idiot with a uterus, you mean. |
Not really. This is a situation where obviously she should get temporary alimony so that she can go back to school, finish her degree, start a career that earns much more than her part time minimum wage job. Oh and ovbviously a good amount of child support, which reflects her having most of the custody. |
She had custody as she stole the kid. She had no interest in school or bettering herself or allowing my husband to while married. If he had to work crappy jobs while she had free time to cheat, then why should she be rewarded. In pp situation she deserves it and more. You clearly never have been cheated on and your family destroyed or you were the one cheating and didn’t care who you hurt. This poster has SN kids She could not work. |
. Don’t marry a man with baggage if it is going to cause you this much resentment—and you know you don’t know all of the ins and outs of their marriage. |
| I have a friend going through a divirce. She is almost 60-one child still underage and living at home. She has been married for over 30 years. Quit work over 20 years ago when they started a family as husband worked insanely long hours in Big Law—as husband wanted her to do. It worked best fir the family and for his career fir her to remain home throughout the years. Now she is pushing 60, no job prospects, no marketable skills—she damn well deserves alimony. He benefited from few responsibilities at home and liked it that way. Fortunately, he agrees and will do the right thing by this woman he is throwing away because he wants to feel young again. |
Come on. “Shopping and entertaining “? This is a weak argument. |
| Men don't earn 99 percent of the income in America, but they do pay 99 percent of the alimony. |
The things you cite were paid into by the person who benefited. Your analogy makes no sense. |
Basically, he worked his butt off for years, while she was semi-retired. Don't they have assets? Isn't she already getting half of them? |
How in the world does a 60 yo woman have an underage child?! And how could this child be so young and needy as to prevent her from working? If she has more than 50% custody, she would be getting child support and she should go get damned job. Being a SAHM is a benefit of marriage: that ends when the marriage ends. At 60, she (and her ex-husband both) should be nearing retirement..... when both would live off their retirement assets... that were already split 50/50 upon divorce. In other words, neither one would have any income, neither would deserve (or be able to pay) alimony, both are living off their retirement...and they have equal retirement. As to all those benefits he received while they were married: why do you think he should provide ongoing benefits to her (alimony) while she has ceased providing any benefits to him? If (if) any alimony is deserved, the law should require her to work an equal number of hours per week as her alimony-paying ex-husband. Oh and the day she retires from work, he too can retire (and stop paying alimony). Anything else would be totally unfair to him. |
| he’s still working. And if they are like me, their net worth is tied up with their home and retirement accounts- not accessible Monty in the short term. Frankly I don’t believe she should be forced to sell her home and while he is still working she gets alimony. |