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I love my husband and wouldn't change a thing overall, but ideally someone who was more into planning and extroverted duringweekends, and being outdoors
and honestly, i am far from someone you would think would marry for money, but if i started from scratch and was looking for $, I'd hang out in dating pools with wealthy people with serious generational wealht, because why not? |
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Agreeeee keep an eye on your future in laws and his relationship with his family!! It will shape so much of your life. Also, high income earner all day every day with potential for growth. I have bee so thankfully blessed that my husband earns a great income and we have a comfortable life, not without its stresses and issues of course but I could only imagine us wanting tk earn more money, not live on less!! He also doesnt pressure me to work except for getting all my social security quarters done, I manage our considerable rental Property portfolio and have a small work from home job plus manage household.
And be especially mindful if any vices- does he gamble, does he drink, does he pop pills or watch porn? Those three things- his family of origin, his salary/profession, and his habits/vices! |
This times a million!! would still marry for love no matter what but wealth/comfort/security matter! |
Having said that, I met him at Princeton and I also went to HBS, so it's not like I didn't have a chance to fall in love with people with generational wealth (and I say generational, because I actually think most people actively looking to make a lot of money wouldn't be good fit for me) |
| I'd have prioritized someone who had more in savings. |
| Own without mental disorders and maladaptive jerk reactions. |
It’s better to marry generational wealth, so long as he knows how to make more or manage it properly. So many I know born into wealth have no idea how to make money— only how to spend it. |
| Not one. |
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His values. Values do not come from your family — they come from yourself. His ability and type of communication style. The way he handles money. His problem solving skills and level of resourcefulness.
I’m not married but this is important for everyone. |
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The same one I married.
We dated for 5 years so that we could both fully see what we were getting in the other. The best advice I ever got was TAKE YOUR TIME. |
| I would date and marry my DH again. He is a keeper. knowing what I know now, I would do some things different e.g. kids and career for me. But I would do it with my DH. |
+1 Also, some people just become more of who they really are. If you see traits you're not thrilled about but think you can tolerate early in the relationship, consider those traits will only magnify over 20 years and become an even more significant part of who they are. I think to actually change for the better someone needs to work at it. Oftentimes the change we see is that the person is really just become more of who they really are. |
| Someone without a personality disorder... |
Actually it’s exactly how it works. |
| Disconnected family. Not necessarily estranged, just independent and self sufficient. As an orphan myself, I have a really hard time dealing with the expectations and outright demands of DH’s family (holidays, living locations, access to my life, access to my kids, etc). |