Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Is he spending money on something else without telling you, and
2. Do you have joint accounts and credit cards and can you access all the financial information?
3. If all seems above-board, then you have to sit him down and that say that you have serious concerns about this marriage because he gets to do everything he wants, and refuses to do the things you want. It's fundamentally unfair.
4. Over the course of several conversations, you have to convince him that you get a say in how money is spent, you need a break even if he doesn't. He needs to understand a very important concept that he is not like most people and that he needs to take other people's needs into account.
5. I would refuse to take that in-law vacation and I would book a nice trip (post-pandemic) for myself and the children, with perhaps your relatives or friends. It's your money too, and you only have one life to live, OP. Don't live on his terms and stay miserable.
1. No
2. Yes
3. We have had this kind of conversation but it never goes well. The last time we had it was when he bought an expensive car. He was like "I work hard and I deserve this." Which I don't disagree with. The time before that was when he wanted to join a $$$ for golf. Again, I don't have a problem with that if we can do other things like travel. But it's weird when he refuses my requests to hire household help. We don't have any cleaning or law help. He won't even let me hire painters or handymen and insists of fixing things around the house himself. I can't get him to see why this is weird though. He's very much a "why would I hire someone to do something for me when I can do it myself."
4. He was really against the idea of my taking the kids away on a vacation by myself.
To answer the other poster's question, he's in his early forties. I don't think he is worried about his specific job but he does see that the industry is changing. We have a lot of money saved though. I don't know what he thinks we need this money for since he has no plans to use it on anything besides the kids' college educations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Is he spending money on something else without telling you, and
2. Do you have joint accounts and credit cards and can you access all the financial information?
3. If all seems above-board, then you have to sit him down and that say that you have serious concerns about this marriage because he gets to do everything he wants, and refuses to do the things you want. It's fundamentally unfair.
4. Over the course of several conversations, you have to convince him that you get a say in how money is spent, you need a break even if he doesn't. He needs to understand a very important concept that he is not like most people and that he needs to take other people's needs into account.
5. I would refuse to take that in-law vacation and I would book a nice trip (post-pandemic) for myself and the children, with perhaps your relatives or friends. It's your money too, and you only have one life to live, OP. Don't live on his terms and stay miserable.
1. No
2. Yes
3. We have had this kind of conversation but it never goes well. The last time we had it was when he bought an expensive car. He was like "I work hard and I deserve this." Which I don't disagree with. The time before that was when he wanted to join a $$$ for golf. Again, I don't have a problem with that if we can do other things like travel. But it's weird when he refuses my requests to hire household help. We don't have any cleaning or law help. He won't even let me hire painters or handymen and insists of fixing things around the house himself. I can't get him to see why this is weird though. He's very much a "why would I hire someone to do something for me when I can do it myself."
4. He was really against the idea of my taking the kids away on a vacation by myself.
To answer the other poster's question, he's in his early forties. I don't think he is worried about his specific job but he does see that the industry is changing. We have a lot of money saved though. I don't know what he thinks we need this money for since he has no plans to use it on anything besides the kids' college educations.
Anonymous wrote:1. Is he spending money on something else without telling you, and
2. Do you have joint accounts and credit cards and can you access all the financial information?
3. If all seems above-board, then you have to sit him down and that say that you have serious concerns about this marriage because he gets to do everything he wants, and refuses to do the things you want. It's fundamentally unfair.
4. Over the course of several conversations, you have to convince him that you get a say in how money is spent, you need a break even if he doesn't. He needs to understand a very important concept that he is not like most people and that he needs to take other people's needs into account.
5. I would refuse to take that in-law vacation and I would book a nice trip (post-pandemic) for myself and the children, with perhaps your relatives or friends. It's your money too, and you only have one life to live, OP. Don't live on his terms and stay miserable.
Anonymous wrote:Your husband is worried and stressed. That's where all this comes from. Unravel that and everything will change.
BTW, it's fine for kids to share a room. Three of my kids share a room and they are just fine.
Anonymous wrote:I’m trying to figure out who you are! He is a real rarity on Wall Street for sure. Do you have any access to money?
I’ll try to relate in the way that maybe he’s thinking. If he’s youngish and hasn’t had too many good years then maybe he’s trying to aggressively save for retirement and college for court kids. Do your older ones go to private school? Wall street jobs are probably not going to be around as much as they are now in 20 years. I’ve seen so many lost jobs over my career. People have had to reinvent themselves. Maybe he’s worried about this?
If he’s making 7 figures, I would definitely want to know WHY he won’t move to a bigger house. If you bought it 15 years ago for $500k and it’s worth $1m then it makes financial sense to take that $500k tax free and move up. You could use that as your angle. I would really push this.
I assume that you are SAH. It seems like there is an imbalance of power. I might start talking about getting a job and hiring a full time nanny to put you more on equal footing.
He clearly doesn’t value family time. I would also insist on a family vacation. If your only vacation is with his family, that’s not a vacation for you. Book a place and take the kids in the summer when nothing is going on. Don’t ask for permission.
Anonymous wrote:so there's two issues here, somewhat related. We've been married for 15 years with 4 kids. Youngest is 4.
First is, DH is increasingly becoming a workaholic. He's a managing partner in a financial investment firm. He works all the time. It has actually gotten worse since the Pandemic started because now there is no commute and no "end" to his workday. He just keeps on all night. He's always been a workaholic though. He never wants to do things with me and our kids. I've reacted by just giving up trying to get him to go and I take them to do things like visit a pumpkin patch, trick-or-treat, visit Santa, etc. etc. on my own. He does take time off but it is for his own purposes - he plays golf once a week with friends in the summer and early fall. I don't mind that he does this, I think it's good for him to have an outlet, but then when it comes to me an the kids wanting to do family things, he supposedly never has the ability to take time off. It just seems like an obvious contradiction to me.
Second issue is that strangely, as his income has increased, he's gotten cheaper. He doesn't want to move out of our "starter" house. This is the house we bought for ~ 500k in 2005. Two of our kids have to share a room. I would like to move to a bigger house so that each kid could have their own room but he is a firm "no" on that.
Related to the above two issues, he never wants to take a vacation. We take one annual vacation to the beach that I kind of hate because it is always with his family. He knows I hate it but he doesn't care. When it comes to the possibility of other vacations, he says he can't take any more time off but that's bullshit. No one is truly indispensable. When our kids were really young and not STTN, I didn't care that much because I didn't want to take them on vacation anyway. But now that the youngest has gotten to an easier stage, I would like to take family vacations. I offered to take the kids on my own, like I do with everything else, but he said no way, he is not working to fund "junkets" so that we can have fun without him. But he never wants to come anyway.
What I don't get is why he works so hard for so much money that he never spends. His income varies but it's typically a little over 7 figures a year. And he refuses to move to a nicer house, take vacations, buy a vacation home, etc. What's the point?
Can anyone else relate to this? I know there are a lot of law firm partners on here. My H works in a different field but it sounds somewhat similar in the hours.
Anonymous wrote:no, my husband barely works a few hours a day and doesn't make much money, AND he wants nice vacations without extended family, so I can't relate there...however...
on a serious note: I'm sorry, I imagine its a combination of work culture reinforcing his habits, and the fact that being a parent to 4 kids, if you're not used to it, is harder than being at work. You're the efualt parent and its hard to argue against "but I have work."
I think you should spend some money on fantastic vacations and if he doesn't want to come along, you bring a friend and/or a sitter for the kids. You should have a say in how money is spent.
might be worth some therapy. how are things otherwise? Its kinda hard to work on a marriage with 4 kids and an absent partner...