Bump |
He’s sorry if he hates you now. Sounds like that’s just how it goes. |
You have fully invented that she "financially support[ed]" him. All she said was she has a busy job. Not that it's high-paid, not that she's the breadwinner, not that they needed her insurance, not that he didn't get disability from his own job. You made ALL OF THAT up to justify her completely unemotional reaction to him saying she didn't support him during cancer. Same as all of the PPs on this thread talking about how overwhelmed she was, or how maybe he's just crazy. Given the chance to respond to him about this accusation her response was "I have a demanding career." Yep, I'd leave her. That's not a marriage. |
I should write screenplays? Thanks I guess, even though you're the one spinning up a "what if" scenario based on :: checks notes:: literally nothing. Here's what OP said: Adult children. I have a demanding career. I’m sorry if I could not be there 100 percent. Dassit. Not "I had to keep the bills paid, I provide the insurance, I paid the mortgage." None of that. Just "I was busy at work." |
Right that’s why there was an article to back up the statistics. Not your feefees. I don’t think the OP should cry, I think she should consider her support for her husband a sunk cost, stop working immediately (while preserving her network for later) and file for divorce herself. If the people who think she wasn’t financially supporting him are correct, she won’t have any alimony to pay. If the people who assume she was are correct, she will have reduced alimony based on her new financial situation, and her children will be taken care of by their fathers life insurance when he passes. Win-win. |
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Most very successful women I know wish they had enjoyed their family and life more before their kids turned 19 and left.
None of the c-level dinners I’ve had have had women say “I have a demanding career, I couldn’t be there 100%.” I also know men who, when their Private equity firm was riding them for helping their spouse through cancer treatments, left the firm and started their own firm. People in the industry know who I’m talking about. |
Doesn’t matter who files first. All assets will be split. If he’s smart he’ll also have a 5 year true up clause signed off by a forensic accountant for any deferred income she pushes out for post-divorce. |
| Dude guys come on. op is a guy and he deserted his wife during her sickness and it was the last straw. OP has estranged himself from his family; his adult kids must have seen this pattern of neglect and selfishness play out for years. He’s done for. And he’s not going to post here again. |
This. DH drops work anytime a family member is in a crisis and his partners do the same. That's the beauty of being at the peak of your power. I have a less prestigious job but I do the same and if my firm wants to fire me for it, good riddance. |
Filing first isn’t about getting more, it’s about taking away the power her DH believes he has by telling her she’s not on the life insurance. Maybe he’s also not invited to his birthday party! He seems incredibly attention-seeking and the best way to deal with people like that is just to call their bluff and move on. He can ask for whatever clauses he wants. If he wasn’t a dependent, he won’t get alimony and if he was, he’s going to be dead soon anyway or this whole life insurance thing is just a dramatic temper tantrum. Short-term alimony. |
Dream on. That’s not at all what’s going on with gray divorces. Besides, at that age most “demanding job” careers are pulling in $1M+ gross a year so a $1-2M life insurance payout split between a spouse and adult kids is peanuts. And no one has any idea what the ill, recovered spouse pulls in. Either way, all marital assets will be split 50/50. Op sounds like a chicken $hit who wouldn’t step back from “work” during a family crisis. Their coworkers prob think they’re a jack@$$ as well. Quite the role model. |
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This isn’t about power.
This is about a selfish neglectful spouse who has their priorities totally backwards, and probably has the whole marriage. The only power going on, is after the divorce Op can’t hide behind the fake persona they have the last 20-30 years. |
No judge would require such a clause. My exH was a millionaire who hid his stock options in Liechtenstein. Good luck forcing anyone sign a settlement with this clause. |