He can do whatever he wants with his money. I know married guys who have acquired significant assets prior to marriage, and not a single one of them just hands over the money for their wife to blow. Of course you want his money because he has a LOT more than you. |
Divorce this one and don’t marry another communist. |
OPs wife is a true capitalist. After reading this thread, I'm rooting for her and not him. |
Date a lot more after divorcing this one. |
You mean she's a Warren capitalist -- steal as much as you can. |
+1 I purchased the house we live in before we married (been married 22 years FWIW). After we married, I did not put DH on the title because, from the poinnt we got married, it was considered marital property. OTOH, when I first started living we DH, we were living in a condo he and his parents purchased. We never lived there while married and it was not considered marital property. DH did not get attended to the title to our home until the home was refinanced. I wouldn't put anyone on the title that also wasn't on the mortgage. Otherwise, they get all the benefit and none of the financial liability. |
Wrong Spoken by someone married 40 years and going strong. I had money he had none. Put him through school I worked. . You set your marriage up to fail period. And you are controlling. Get over yourself. You don’t have a marriage. Yes there are many ways to have one, but you are posting on an online forum asking questions that’s are so ridiculous, are you kidding I am not the one who has issues. |
I am russian, and for many of my compatriots it is important that the husband gives expensive gifts.
I have never heard about a wife account, but cars, jewelry, expensive vacations - this is often expected by more traditional women. I think smart husbands sort of play along and buy them stuff, it’s marital property anyway, so... I am just giving you the perspective. Maybe buy her a fancy gift and see what she says. Even a nice laptop will do to test the waters. Maybe she doesn’t feel loved since she doesn’t get gifts. Not saying this is right but just the way some people are. |
If you want to see who you're marrying, you can usually figure it out by looking at their parents. I'd start there. Look at page 17-20 of this booklet and do it with your wife. Print it out, complete it alone, and then compare your answers. Hopefully that can get you closer to figuring out the disparity here. https://www.prepare-enrich.com/landing/couples_workbook.html I would say her throwing in the cultural card at this point is BS. But you shouldn't dismiss everything she's saying or you're headed to divorce if you can't talk through stuff. Best of luck. |
I got a reverse dowry from my Asian in laws in the form of assets that belong to me. I’m white. |
It sounds like you both have control issues with money. Maybe go to counseling or get some outside perspectives. What a nothing thing to eat up your marriage over. If you both love each other you both need to give up the control a bit. |
You don't dictate what other people do with their money, you old goat. |
Do you have significant assets and that’s why you made your DW sign a prenup? Your finances are separate which must be making DW feel insecure and she’s also getting bad advice from nosy women. Even if the idea of getting a “wife” house/account appealed to her, she shouldn’t have just sprung it up on you as if you’re going to comply. She sounds young and not so savvy enough to be a gold digger. ?
You have been married only 3 years so it’s early but you have to set the tone right and you can make some changes so you’re on the right path. If there isn’t trust and things aren’t done jointly then it’ll be difficult to move things forward without resentment and build a life together. What if you guys have kids and she wants to sahm and doesn’t make her own income? Will you support that or would you want her to continue working and expect both to pay for a nanny/daycare? FWIW, I’m Asian, DH’s Asian. I owned a house before we met and then sold it after we married and DH wanted nothing to do with it and wanted me to keep all my money and earnings in a separate account. We also paid for our wedding together since we could afford it and didn’t want our parents getting involved. We also discussed before marriage that being a SAHM was important to me and he agreed so that’s what I did soon after having a baby. After we got married, we lived on the money he brought in even though I worked as well. When I stopped working, we continued to keep separate accounts but also have a joint account so the big expenses like the mortgage gets paid from his account and I take a small monthly amount to spend on monthly expenses. I know I’m lucky that DH doesn’t micromanage and doesn’t care how I use our money but I also don’t spend carelessly so there’s no need for him to worry. We have assets and investments that he always puts both of our names on and he always got life insurance upped each time we had another kid so that if anything were to happen to him, we would be protected. DH has made me feel secure without me having to say anything and has made me feel like an equal partner even though he now makes 10x more than he did at the beginning of our marriage. We remained the same and our spending remained the same. I know that had he approached our finances differently we would be at a different place now and maybe I would’ve resorted to a more hoarding behavior and putting money aside to protect myself in case we divorced. |
She may be pondering what her life would’ve been like in a traditional Chinese marriage - and bc grass is always greener - now she’s regretting getting with a white guy bc in her mind, a Chinese husband would’ve given her soooo much better. |
Interesting, continuing to show your true colors. Controlling and when you can not you show your lower intelligence. |