Yeah, the big law partners I know with SAHM wives, none of them started out as SAHMs, they met at Harvard law or wherever then wife quit when kids were small. |
I want (and have) an intelligent wife. That correlates strongly but not perfectly with career. Also we met at work, as many do, so it occurred naturally. (This was in the 90s and I know that's less common in today's online dating world, but still happens a lot.) And we're both sufficiently hot but never received any modeling offers. |
My observation of married men around me tells me educated and successful men tend to go for women who’ll eventually make good mothers because most picked educated, smart, decent, well spoken, good looking women from compatible families. Nobody went for just looks, money or career. They did date all types, mostly beautiful ones.
It seems standards are different for random dating, looks are a big currency there. |
Exactly, but these threads always bring out the outliers, somebody who knows somebody who knows somebody who makes seven figures and married the barista who made his latte every AM. |
They’re too busy working! |
Well, high number of divorce for beautiful and career women tells you it’s not something which keeps men attracted for long. Once married, they want a caring partner for themselves and a good mother for their children. |
Man here —
Career doesn’t matter but education does. The ideal woman attends a t10, majors in a humanities or social science, works for a few years in a self actualizing sector, then shift to part time. Dutch women have this down to a science. Check out how Dutch women approach work and life |
+1 My husband was raised by a strong, single mother surrounded by highly educated Aunts. He never wanted a SAHM or a woman who never had a career. I was raised by parents that taught us to always have our own form of income. I never 'needed' to work given husband's salary, but I derive a lot of pleasure and value for the career I have which is the reason I got my graduate degree. I'm fortunate it was always flexible with the way I wanted to raise my kids, e.g., WAH. |
If, by his standards, the guy thinks a woman is really good looking, and he thinks she likes him a lot, it's game over.
A woman not having any job at all might be seen as a bit odd, but nearly zero men care about your career. You have a good one? Great, it's certainly not a minus, but zero men will say or feel "I not really into her, but I have to admit, she does have a good career track!" Not happening. |
Same goes for women, husband’s looks and career is only good if he is a caring husband and a dedicated father. |
Married to gorgeous 6'6"+ men with a funny sarcastic sense of humor. That's how they approach it. I've dated some hot Dutch men in my lifetime. |
Exactly None of those things are explicit about career status. |
I don't think the decision works like that. People fall in love for a number of reasons. |
I agree with you but not all men want to work harder to get promotions and many want to spend time with their kids. So then the question becomes who is going to work for the family? |
Right — Harvard law is the requisite signal Not the biglaw status of wifes after graduation. |