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You people are nuts!
First, how long is planning to go without income? Is it one year? Two? Five? You need a hard end date here, and realize the longer it is the harder it will be to walk away from. It’s always going to be “so close” to profitability... . I also suggest a hard no on investing your own savings into the business. There a reason why entrepreneurs tend to have horrible credit and it’s because they trully believe in their business and think it’s going to work. Most businesses fail and this one is no different. Please don’t be reassured because there are investors involved. Angel investors fund many businesses at a time with the expectations that 9 out of 10 will fail. They have the wealth to take those risks. Do you? |
You are creating a straw man. That is not what I said. But procreating is, yes, one of the main objectives of life and therefore marriage. You sure watched a lot of disney growing up, huh? |
There are plenty of people on this earth whose main objective in life is not popping out kids, and many ways one can live a very fulfilling life that don’t include children. Stop being so ignorant. |
I fundamentally don't agree with your world view, sorry. Being dense has nothing to do with it. You aren't married, are you? |
DP. It sounds like you did if you consider marriage and breeding the two main objectives of life. |
OP already explained that the nanny takes the child to school in the morning because she and her husband have to get to work early. We had our nanny from the time our babies were born and also still pay her a full-time salary even though she works less hours now because we like her and we trust her and she makes our lives easier. Stop questioning OP's choices with respect to child care. |
Based on your rationale, all the ladies in TTC should just off themselves. |
Yes, right, that is exactly what I said.
Anyway, I can't tell who I am responding to anymore because there are several people part of this conversation apparently. But my vitriol is directed at the woman (self-declared) who stated that OP should just be grateful for her one kid and let DH determine what comes next because he should be a priority in the marriage, since he is her one true love chosen above all others! Sorry, I don't agree. If she wants a 2nd kid and he knew/agreed to at least 2 kids going into the marriage, that should be a priority. However, there is no reason they can't figure out a way to both have another kid and have her DH get his dream, so they are very fortunate there. |
| Happy husband happy life. Let your husband work towards his goal and he will turn around and let you work towards yours. I’d love to tell you be an equal team and focus on your needs too but in my experience men are self-centered and marriage works better this way. |
So, OP. This is what it comes down to. Is he willing to set some hard boundaries for this project? Can he start with a leave of absence from his current job to test out the new gig? The business could go south very fast. What is his plan if that happens? |
Marriage works better when one spouse bankrupts the family? Hmmmk |
| this won't end well. but the wife isn't the person to tell her husband that. maybe see if there's an auditor or someone whose opinion he trusts that can give a third-party viewpoint. |
+1 There are quite a few red flags here. The biggest of them is that the founder is "not a numbers guy." That said OP, there are quite a few things you can re-work to make it possible for your DH to have a career that is more fulfilling for him. |
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OP, the day he married you, YOU become the number #1 priority in his life. When you and he have a child, that child and you become the #1 priority in his life. Whatever goal and ambition he has, they become secondary. His #1 goal in life is to support you and the child. He should NOT be thinking about himself, what make him happy. Those days are gone.
I make 400k/year as a software architect. I was offered to join a risky start-up and the return would be 100 times more than what I am making now. If I were single, yes, I would jump at the opportunity but I am married with a wife and 2 years old daughter, I can NOT take that risk. I have to think about the well being of my wife and child. I want to take risk but not the expense of my wife and child well being. My wife and child well being is at the top of the list, bar none. |
| I don't understand why the business partner can't pay your husband a salary, yet can pay for all your husband's travel? Merchants require more then a smile. I also don't understand why it's all or nothing, why he can't do this part time and see if he likes it, if the business is viable, if he and his friend can work well together..., that sort of thing. Realize too that if a business fails, investors are screwed. It is not like a loan unless it is specifically structured as a loan. Given that this friend isn't good with numbers, he may have been dumb enough to structure these "investments" as loans, in which case you want to be absolutely certain, in writing, that you and your husband will not be stuck owing money by the time this is all done. Assumming sanity kicked in, and the investors truly did invest v. loan the business money, don't plan on seeing any actual cash if the business fails. I personally wouldn't be ok with this, and I'd say so. Your desires matter, though not for the business aspect of this discussion. If your husband wants to work for a startup, he needs to find one with better management, one who will pay him, and one who would accept him working that in adition to his day job if the salary is minimual. |