I don't know why this is such a source of stress for you. Sit down, figure out a budget, including what goes into the savings/retirement accounts that aren't readily accessible. So, every 1st of the month, that money goes into the kitty. Whatever is left you spend that month. Assume it will be all gone. He and you can't spend the money you don't have. That's it. Assume that whatever is left after the savings/retirement contribution is made will be gone by the 30th of each month. |
I'm just curious - how much do each of you make? |
I am curious as to how you paid off $200K in student debt in three years by age 26. Assuming you live in Virginia, it take pre-tax earnings of $165K per year to net $100K. That's before healthcare insurance costs, retirement savings, or any living expenditures at all (food, mortgage/rent, utilities, car). Let's say it takes $3,000 per month for all expenses. That leaves you with $64K per year for debt paydown = $200K in just over three years. But how many 22/23 year old make $165/ year coming out of college??? |
I asked OP the same above. Would love to know how much she and her husband each make. |
Obviously OP use to be a part time drug dealer and sold a lot of ya yo to clear $200k debt. |
Not pp but my Dh lived in a room in falls church for $450 a month in 2010 and only spent about $900 total a month. He paid off 80k in loans in 2 years making about that much. |
Yes, I really would like to know what OP was making in order to pay off $200K in 3 years. I'm envious!
My husband and I had a combined $65k in student loan debt 11 years ago. We have it down now to about $25k total. Our current HHI is now appromately $120k gross per year but was much less than that 11 years ago. We could push harder to pay off the student loans but since the interest is deductable I'd rather pay off my husband's car first. |
Maybe OP ate mayo sandwiches and sugar water for 3 years in order to clear off $200k of debt. |
yes this would almost be impossible for someone who wasn't a prostitute......... |
OP, I prefer to be mostly in control of the finances. However, the way you speak about your husband makes you sound like a control freak. He is not a child.
Would he be agreeable to an allowance? Some people are, some people aren't. Whatever you do there has to be an agreement. Badgering him won't be healthy for your marriage. Maybe open an account he can spend out of. Rather than completely separating finances, decide together what is a reasonable amount to be frivolous with. Have that transferred in to an account and that's the play money he feels like he needs sometimes. |
Something I noticed with Asian families - indian and east asian - they base happiness purely on finances and money because most came from nothing to have something here in the US. I know a couple that although were younger than you and your hubby married before they finished college also from different cultures one that prioritized money and the other didn't as much but they married for love and are doing well together. So it seems you are seeing your hubbys spending as catastrophic to your goals but realize that he's from a different culture that will never align to your own. You have to accept his cultural differences, the way he grew up, etc because you love him right? Most americans - white, black, hispanic - aren't raised with the same cutthroat discipline asians were raised with. Culturally discipline is ingrained in most asians from a very young age and you can't change that about your hubby. You can however set a goal and try to stick to it. Start with a small goal then work your way up. |
Sounds like OP doesn't know what spendthrift truly means. |
$3k/mo is a lot of money. It's amazing how little you spend if you have a roommate, live in a tiny place, and go without the typical crap most Americans must have (cell phone, vacations, eating out, new clothes, manicures, etc). |
OP here, your calculations are wrong, though your guess at my salary is close to correct. I became a lawyer at age 23 and went straight to a big law firm, where I started making 160k, with annual increases and bonuses. I never spent anywhere close to 3k per month, lol. You really don't know what frugality is if you think 3k per month is a frugal amount. |
OP here, I don't base happiness purely on finances. No one does. That is a distortion of Asian values. I am in the majority in most of the world. Most people don't spend the way that pampered Americans and Europeans do. Most of my friends are African (straight from the continent) because those people really know how to conserve resources and live wisely. I have a Ghanaian girlfriend who always looks as if she stepped out of a magazine. Pencil thin with amazing clothes. She makes all of her own stuff and spends very little on clothes. American fashionistas, in comparison, are often deep in debt or rely on their parents' money. African and Asian values are just different. |