Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends. Are you willing to put in the same effort to earn your share of it?
Agree. And it doesn't need to be dollar for dollar, hour for hour -- but being a real give/take team is contrary to gold digging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am I a golddigger if I want my dh to earn more money and be more ambitious so we have a more secure and comfortable life for ourselves and our children?
Would you leave him if he had a job that he enjoyed that paid less? Would you leave him if he turned down a higher paying job to keep the job he likes/is comfortable with? Would you leave him if he lost his higher paying job and took a lower paying job? If the answer is any of these, then, yes, you are a gold-digger. If the income is more important to you than the person, then yes, you are a gold-digger. If the person is worth more than the income, then no. Just wanting more, isn't the problem. Wanting more and taking action if he doesn't come through with more is the problem.
Anonymous wrote:No and my advice is to not allow people to slap misogynistic labels on you.
Anonymous wrote:Am I a golddigger if I want my dh to earn more money and be more ambitious so we have a more secure and comfortable life for ourselves and our children?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends. Are you willing to put in the same effort to earn your share of it?
Sure. I know I am ambitious however, I am concerned he will not lift his share of the load. I certainly do not want to be the primary breadwinner on top of being the primary caregiver. I need him to meet me at least, halfway and provide for us.
Anonymous wrote:Depends. Are you willing to put in the same effort to earn your share of it?
Anonymous wrote:Depends. Are you willing to put in the same effort to earn your share of it?