Anonymous wrote:Hey honey.
I am drained emotionally from this
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone. DH works in IT and he wants to study programming. It would be a night, and I am supportive as long as it does not involve debt. I think you are right that I need to look at cost vs benefit but DH has not given me any specifics on this when asked.
Also, frankly I am drained emotionally from this, and I feel it is largely escapism on his part. He also always brings this up at the most inopportune times. Now it is Mother's Day. The last time we had this discussion he persisted with it over the holidays.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone. DH works in IT and he wants to study programming. It would be a night, and I am supportive as long as it does not involve debt. I think you are right that I need to look at cost vs benefit but DH has not given me any specifics on this when asked.
Also, frankly I am drained emotionally from this, and I feel it is largely escapism on his part. He also always brings this up at the most inopportune times. Now it is Mother's Day. The last time we had this discussion he persisted with it over the holidays.
Anonymous wrote:I have been married to my DH for over ten years, and we have a DS in elementary. DH is unhappy with this job, and he would like to pursue a second bachelor's degree which he thinks would help him change. He had a coworker who recently did this which I think has spurred this. I already supported him several years ago when he pursued a graduate certificate for similar purposes. Both DH and I work full time and earn similar incomes.
His plan to pay for this is to incur educational debt. I strongly feel that since we are approaching 40 our focus should be on paying off our house, saving for retirement, and our son's education. I have told DH I would support any reasonable plan for him to gain whatever credentials he feels he needs, but I will not approve a plan that relies on educational debt.
I think a lot of this has to do with approaching midlife and feeling he needs to shake things up career-wise. How do I get him to see there are other more affordable options? It has become a recurring issue, and I am not sure how to resolve this. I believe his own family is worn out with his career issues. He bounced around jobs a lot when DS was little and he experienced a period of unemployment. I am pretty sure then that no one wants to hear more about his career ambitions, so I stuck dealing with this alone.
Thanks for any suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:I have been married to my DH for over ten years, and we have a DS in elementary. DH is unhappy with this job, and he would like to pursue a second bachelor's degree which he thinks would help him change. He had a coworker who recently did this which I think has spurred this. I already supported him several years ago when he pursued a graduate certificate for similar purposes. Both DH and I work full time and earn similar incomes.
His plan to pay for this is to incur educational debt. I strongly feel that since we are approaching 40 our focus should be on paying off our house, saving for retirement, and our son's education. I have told DH I would support any reasonable plan for him to gain whatever credentials he feels he needs, but I will not approve a plan that relies on educational debt.
I think a lot of this has to do with approaching midlife and feeling he needs to shake things up career-wise. How do I get him to see there are other more affordable options? It has become a recurring issue, and I am not sure how to resolve this. I believe his own family is worn out with his career issues. He bounced around jobs a lot when DS was little and he experienced a period of unemployment. I am pretty sure then that no one wants to hear more about his career ambitions, so I stuck dealing with this alone.
Thanks for any suggestions.