You are setting a dichotomy up in a way that proves your point. You can move places you know people. You can move closer to family. And you can build community where you move, and it might be easier to do so if (1) you are happier on a day to day basis, and (2) you have more time and money because you are no longer in a place that is so work focused and expensive. I'm not saying everyone should move, but I have known several people who have moved out of DC to more rural places, in their 30s or even 40s, and yes, they are happier. It's not for everyone but it is for some people. The key is to be running towards something, not away from something else. People who make big changes because they really want something tend to do what it takes to make it work. If OP was just saying that her DH hated DC for this and that reason, I might agree with you. But he very clearly has a specific idea of where he wants to live and the qualities he'd like it to have, and that's not here. In my observation, people like that who do move often wind up much happier. |
I don’t think he asked her to give up her career. He just wants to talk about it. I’m sure that if they really looked, and it’s clear she will be miserable in her work, he won’t ask her to move. It’s weird that people think she should just shut him down immediately. |
So what you are saying is that if you moved to one of those other places, you would like the setting more but you'd be unhappy because of the pay cut, not being able to do your ideal job, and moving your kids. Okay. Some people are unhappy in the DMV because of the cost of living, disliking the work culture here, and having their kids in a highly competitive environment that is not what they want for their kids. I think these people would be happier somewhere else. But you've create this self-justifying fiction where if someone isn't happy in the DMV, it's just because they are naturally unhappy people. Come on. |
No, they don’t. And maybe OP doesn’t want to? Why would I want to give up my colleagues and pension to start a business? |
Someone who blames ALL their problems on where they live is not being honest with themselves. I’m still curious if the DH who professess to love the outdoors so much even tries to take advantage of the opportunities here? I know people who really do live for travel or sailing or whatever, but they make it part of their lives wherever they are. |
So that she can live near her husband and child…? I mean, it’s not as important as a pension and 3% interest rate on a mortgage. But it’s something. |
That's not fair. We left DC because I was so miserable with the weather, and my husband was just miserable, and we are actually much happier in our new place. It's not even new anymore = we've been here for almost 9 years. It just suits us better, day to day. And it's certainly, CERTAINLY not without its own issues - but, yes, we are happier. We're just lucky that we were on the same page about wanting to move, and on the same page about where we wanted to move to - and were both able to move with remote jobs we could take with us. Being aligned like that makes it much less of a hard choice! I just don't know how you do this if only one person wants to go, one person really wants to stay - and also that person can't take a job they love with them. I don't know if there is a good option, basically! I will say - if we were staying in DC, we'd considered moving to Fredericksburg, because it seemed smaller and more relaxed, and closer to a lot of nature. It's not Vermont, but it might be worth looking at. Or Harper's Ferry. Good luck, OP - this sounds hard, and I think it's really good of you to even consider this move. |
Also you don't just "start a business" - are you thinking, like, a retail business? Selling... hot sauce? A cleaning company? A digital marketing firm? A small law practice? Any kind of business = success and happiness? This sounds like a Lifetime movie, not an actual plan. |
I have no idea what OP does. I’m guessing that she doesn’t sell hot sauce for a living. I started a small medical practice. My mom did medical writing. My brother has a small law practice. It’s not hard to make $200k at these things. And no, not necessarily “success and happiness.” Just not “miserable” as the pp asserted. |
Women who give up their careers for their marriage, are always the ones that end up financially ruined in divorce. This will not turn out well for you OK if you yield to your husband's childish, selfish demands. I think what you're doing already is more than meeting him halfway. I don't think I would enjoy spending every vacation I have out in nature. I might like to go to Rome or Paris once in a while. I think it's time to call his bluff and tell him that you're separating. He can move. You and child will stay in DC. |
Agree there are opportunities but this isn't really that relevant IMO. Where he takes advantage of natural areas that are typical fat away, through high traffic driving, crowded when you arrive, often in very unpleasant weather is not really indicative of what you might do in great weather with gorgeous state parks right nearby etc. I know that if I lived in Boulder, my lifestyle would be different, no question. For the same reason I do more biking, hiking etc on vacation than I usually do here. This isn't to say OP should leave her job and move when her marriage is rocky etc. But the whole point is that DH is looking for a certain lifestyle and not "can I go canoeing if I drive for a half hour in Beltway traffic and get there early enough to find parking." |
Not everyone is a doctor, lawyer or accountant. We can’t just move to the middle of nowhere and set up shop. It’s clear OP works in a DC centric job, probably gov related. Springing this on her after a decade or two of being together is awful! He is asking for a dramatic change in her life, identity and lifestyle. |
PP here. I realize you are really invested in this since you've now dedicated 6 or 7 paragraphs to it. But OP has offered two compromises and her husband has dismissed them and offered that she quit her job and follow him, end of story. Her husband is having a mid-life crisis, as many of us have observed, and is not going to be happy with anything at this point, no matter how many paragraphs you write. |
Did one of you give up a career you loved and more than half of your HHI? |
Also didn’t the OP mention her marriage was on shaky ground? Sorry if that was a different post. Snowballs chance in hell I’d give up my house, stable job and 200k+ income to move somewhere I don’t have a job, that my income potential is way lower, they we may not like and that might not fix my marriage. Divorce in Vermont and you hate it? Have fun living there on a diminished income with a higher mortgage rate until the kids are 18. |