Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I faced some problem; frankly decided I’d spent most of my life compromising what I’d like, working to help others get what they wanted, while they showed little interest in my wishes. Figured had buried my parents and raised my kids, time for me to build a life I like. My husband and I live separately; we visit and travel together, but he does not want any change, is not willing to consider moving and I do not want to spend the rest of my life running a house for his comfort. Works well for us; unorthodox but we each live as we like. About time too!
How far apart do you live?
Anonymous wrote:I faced some problem; frankly decided I’d spent most of my life compromising what I’d like, working to help others get what they wanted, while they showed little interest in my wishes. Figured had buried my parents and raised my kids, time for me to build a life I like. My husband and I live separately; we visit and travel together, but he does not want any change, is not willing to consider moving and I do not want to spend the rest of my life running a house for his comfort. Works well for us; unorthodox but we each live as we like. About time too!
Anonymous wrote:OP, thank you for posting this!
We've been married for 21 years and the last kid will be out in 2.5 years. My DH wants to retire in 4 years. We live in Los Angeles.
DH is from Virginia. I'm from a beach town in California and I always thought we would move there. Every time we'd visit that town, we'd look at houses and nothing was right.
About five years ago, when I showed him something I thought was awesome, and he didn't like it, and suddenly I realized that the reason we never make progress with discussing the future is that our visions really don't have an intersection in the Venn diagram. Not only in imagining our style of house, but our idea of retirement home etc.
Then this fall, he suddenly went on a tear about how due to years of mismanagement, California is becoming a pit, and it's ridiculously expensive etc etc....and no way in hell would he be retiring in CA and he's thinking Florida or South Carolina, blah blah...
And I was thinking, "WTF?" and also, "is there any WE in this discussion?"
So suddenly the Venn diagram circles got really far apart!
I'm totally ignoring all this. I just can't deal with this on top of some of the stressors that come with teenagers. I'll just worry about it after the kids are out. I figure we'll both be a little more relaxed and maybe there will be a way to figure it out that we haven't thought of yet (other than divorce or death, ha ha!)
Anonymous wrote:I faced some problem; frankly decided I’d spent most of my life compromising what I’d like, working to help others get what they wanted, while they showed little interest in my wishes. Figured had buried my parents and raised my kids, time for me to build a life I like. My husband and I live separately; we visit and travel together, but he does not want any change, is not willing to consider moving and I do not want to spend the rest of my life running a house for his comfort. Works well for us; unorthodox but we each live as we like. About time too!
Anonymous wrote:OP, thank you for posting this!
We've been married for 21 years and the last kid will be out in 2.5 years. My DH wants to retire in 4 years. We live in Los Angeles.
DH is from Virginia. I'm from a beach town in California and I always thought we would move there. Every time we'd visit that town, we'd look at houses and nothing was right.
About five years ago, when I showed him something I thought was awesome, and he didn't like it, and suddenly I realized that the reason we never make progress with discussing the future is that our visions really don't have an intersection in the Venn diagram. Not only in imagining our style of house, but our idea of retirement home etc.
Then this fall, he suddenly went on a tear about how due to years of mismanagement, California is becoming a pit, and it's ridiculously expensive etc etc....and no way in hell would he be retiring in CA and he's thinking Florida or South Carolina, blah blah...
And I was thinking, "WTF?" and also, "is there any WE in this discussion?"
So suddenly the Venn diagram circles got really far apart!
I'm totally ignoring all this. I just can't deal with this on top of some of the stressors that come with teenagers. I'll just worry about it after the kids are out. I figure we'll both be a little more relaxed and maybe there will be a way to figure it out that we haven't thought of yet (other than divorce or death, ha ha!)
Anonymous wrote:Instead of trying to plan for the very long term, just look for this immediate term (before your kids become parents). My in-laws eventually moved close to us, but there were many years of empty nesting where they lived where they wanted and we lived in NYC doing the professional grind.