Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I was just finishing college and he was 5 years into a good career. He had a 401K, healthy savings, and budget for a vacation every year. I had a checking account with $400 in it.
Honestly, we just kept separate finances for the first few years. I didn't want to lean on him, financially speaking. Once I was on my own feet and doing as well as he was, we combined finances.
It wasn't too hard because I knew it was temporary. The awkward times were when he wanted to do something together, and I just had to be like "sorry, can't afford it ... You can go by yourself or buy me a ticket if you really want to" (he generally wanted to more often than I was comfortable with).
This whole mentality is so foreign to me. You were MARRIED. You're leaning on each other no matter what. Keeping separate accounts is ultimately a fiction.
No, sorry, I wasn't clear. The question was about when we "got together". I interpreted that as serious dating, eventually living together. We didn't get married until we were much closer to an even split on anything, and that's when we combined finances. I didn't want to lean on a serious boyfriend, even if I THOUGHT we were headed for marriage, nor did I want to commingle our accounts until we were legally married.