Anonymous wrote:Do what you want and what feels good for you in your relationship.
I always liked working. I derive satisfaction from working. I didn't derive much satisfaction from being a full time mom (which I essentially did for 3 years - though always was technically employed at the time, for purposes of keeping my resume fresh).
I hear a lot of women on this forum say that their husbands always continued to treat them as the same equal when they stayed home. That's great! In my case, I don't think I'd ever be attracted to the kind of guy who had the same respect for a sahm wife as he would have for a working wife. Because honestly that means he probably didn't put a whole lot of value in the accomplishments of a working wife. I have accomplished a lot in my career and education. It really is harder and more interesting than baby raising. So if a guy was like "my opinions of you won't change based on whether you continue working or not"..... . that's kind of weird, and not the guy for me. Consequently, my DH is very attracted to my professional success; we definitely weren't as connected or have the same energy when I wasn't working. But again - your DH and your relationship may be different, so you do you.
Anonymous wrote:I would consider a postnup .
Also, agree that you will only do this until kids are in school, then what will the arrangement be. You will be too vulnerable if you give up your career entirely. And, as others have said, that sends the wrong message to children in 2024.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a risk, and saying it isn’t is lying. How long have you been married? At 20 years you would be entitled to alimony as a SAHP in many states, but if less you can be out with nothing. Do you have assets that are not co-mingled and solely in your name? How do your retirement accounts look?
That’s the financial implications.
On the family implications, the studies are pretty clear that being raised by SAHM’s means girls will earn less money. That may or may not be fine with you. Anecdotally, it impacts how much respect boys will have for women but the data is less clear. What will this mean for your children’s education? Will they still go to camp?
And then the relationship implications. This depends on your spouse. If his attraction to you is predicated on you having a really interesting and dynamic life away from the marriage than yeah, it’s going to be a struggle in the toddler years. Different strokes for different folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My biggest struggle is I hated feeling dependent on DH. He NEVER made me feel this way and would always be reassuring me that it wasn't "his money" and the like. And our marriage was and is beyond great. I just hated that dependent feeling (granted looking back I also had PPD). I ended up going back to work when DS was 5 to a job where I worked 3 12 hr shifts a week. I was much much happier. The weird thing was that my mom was a SAHM my whole life.
There was no reason for me to feel this way. We had plenty of money for me to SAH. It just wasn't something that made me very happy.
OP here. This for us, too. My husband is wonderful and we made the decision to live off his salary. He has never questioned how much I spend or what I need to spend on. It’s our money, not his or mine.
Anonymous wrote:My biggest struggle is I hated feeling dependent on DH. He NEVER made me feel this way and would always be reassuring me that it wasn't "his money" and the like. And our marriage was and is beyond great. I just hated that dependent feeling (granted looking back I also had PPD). I ended up going back to work when DS was 5 to a job where I worked 3 12 hr shifts a week. I was much much happier. The weird thing was that my mom was a SAHM my whole life.
There was no reason for me to feel this way. We had plenty of money for me to SAH. It just wasn't something that made me very happy.