And it's not that I think women need to have children. Most women after a certain age want to have children. And the ideology you peddle masquerading as good fath advice will leave the vast majority of those women lonely and bitter. |
I've said a few weeks ago that I suspect your real purpose in starting this thread was to brag about your marital fortunes. You mention your husband's perfection at every opportunity. I suppose this is the right forum for it. Where else, eh? |
You omit any care whatsoever for what is in the woman’s interest. This is an odd take for a thread about whether marriage is a good deal for…women. It seems like your conclusion is that it doesn’t matter? |
Why would mothers of wanted children be lonely and bitter? |
It does. |
No, that was my first post in the thread. I just think the women complaining about having a bad husband have already shown why their views shouldn't be considered. They either chose poorly, in which case we shouldn't really care about their insights, or they settled for the best they could get, which means that they aren't some saint deserving a better man, but rather, got the mediocrity they deserve. |
Top 3% HHI is about $351k in 2022. If both of you are working in a HCOL locale, that sounds kinda mediocre—especially for dual Ivy degrees. |
So don’t listen to happy women saying don’t settle, and don’t listen to unhappy women saying don’t settle. Are there any women whose views you do respect? |
No, it has nothing to do with happy or not. I would say that those who chose well (happy or not in life) probably have good insights on marriage. I was originally responding to someone who seems to have chosen poorly, so she probably doesn't add much value to the conversation. |
Bam! Came here to say the same thing. Leveraged top 0.1% of college education to get a top 3% income, made even lower by HCOL. Mediocrity masquerading as meritocracy right before our eyes. OFF TO THE WORK CAMP! Except your husband, he can apply for a stall at the sperm farm. |
Top .4% Try harder. |
Ok, top 0.4% education (dual earners too!) only get an income in the top 3%. Yikes. Have you told your parents how far you’ve fallen? Do your friends know how low you rank in income earners? Don’t worry, you’ll get the more desirable jobs at the camp - afterall, you are at the top end of mediocre. Congrats! |
This does not add up. If he were in the top 10%, he would need a job such as a law partner or doctor, which would make him part of the working wealthy. And to stay within the 10%, he would not be washing dishes (or doing so on a very infrequent basis.) He would be working more than 60 hours a week. I know because I do it. Now he could contribute income, and you can contribute your uterus (for whatever it is worth), and you are happy with that; however, he would not be busting his guts at work to come home to bust suds for you. Try again. And this time, try the truth. |
It seems like some people in this conversation just went to argue for the sake of arguing.
The fact is everyone is able to determine what is beneficial to them and a good deal in life. The fact is that more and more women are viewing marriage as an opportunity deal. Especially true for women who are high earners or who are self-sufficient and don't see the men that they're dating is bringing anything to the table that they don't already have. If men don't like that, they can either step up their game to show that they do have something to offer that is worthwhile or sit down and shut up and find someone who wants what you're selling. Most men still do not do half of household tasks even though both partners work outside the house. Now I'm not going to get into the weeds and say well if he works an hour more in the office each week. She should do an hour more of housework each week because that's for each individual. Couple to decide. But the fact remains that if you pulled most women in marriages and asked what the division of labor is in their house and if it is equitable not equal but equitable they would say no that they do the lion's share. Further, if you get a neutral third party to look at the amount of mental and physical labor each person provides in the household, I am certain that women will be still carrying the bulk share. Now my husband does plenty to help out but there is no way he's at 50% of household tasks. He possibly got close before we had kids but after kids we're looking at around 25% overall. Now right now that works for us because my job is more flexible and I'm able to work 30 hours a week. This division works for our family for now, but if I were to get a different job and we're working 40 hours a week, I can tell you that his 25% would not be near good enough. |
It’s irrelevant how many hours he works at the office unless it correlates to higher pay. |