Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talk to your payroll department about setting up direct transfers to college savings, 401k, whatever other savings you need, and only the net to your joint checking account. If they are anything like my spendthrift spouse, the only way to get them to stop spending is to run out of money in the checking account.
That doesn’t work. Then the spender just runs up credit cards.
How does a prenup work. Does it shield you from spousal debt? Like let’s say I have $1M protected in a prenup trust, and spouse blows $500k, are we both on hook?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG. This scenario would drive me crazy. No specific advice but just wanted to say I hope you figure out a plan to deal with this and that your husband gets a job soon.
One thing I would focus on is your son. You can control that more easily. Where is he getting the money for all this? My sons could not spend like this because they don't have access to our credit cards. You need to cut off access to the son's spending money and put him on a tighter budget.
He’s mostly getting it from DH! Who then turns around and asks me to reimburse him. So frustrating. I feel like dh normalizes this sort of spending and then dc and dh joke that I’m cheap when I object. It’s their little inside joke.
Dh and I keep separate bank accounts. Yes I know people think this is weird, but that’s the way we’ve always done it. And right now, I’m very happy about that.
And I have another dc who is away at college who is like me. He doesn’t like to spend on non essentials either - one thing I remember clearly was talking to him as he walked past a Starbucks freshmen year, saying it was too pricey for him - and thinks before he spends money. We are the frugal ones. Dh and other dc spend on crap
We have separate finances as well. Married 24 years and it works beautifully for us
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I am infuriated on your behalf. The fact that your DH has recruited your son to act the same way as him makes it 10x worse.
+1
It's not only a financial issue, it's a marital and parenting issue. It is emblematic of DH's lack of basic respect for his wife.
How many wives do the exact same thing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG. This scenario would drive me crazy. No specific advice but just wanted to say I hope you figure out a plan to deal with this and that your husband gets a job soon.
One thing I would focus on is your son. You can control that more easily. Where is he getting the money for all this? My sons could not spend like this because they don't have access to our credit cards. You need to cut off access to the son's spending money and put him on a tighter budget.
He’s mostly getting it from DH! Who then turns around and asks me to reimburse him. So frustrating. I feel like dh normalizes this sort of spending and then dc and dh joke that I’m cheap when I object. It’s their little inside joke.
Dh and I keep separate bank accounts. Yes I know people think this is weird, but that’s the way we’ve always done it. And right now, I’m very happy about that.
And I have another dc who is away at college who is like me. He doesn’t like to spend on non essentials either - one thing I remember clearly was talking to him as he walked past a Starbucks freshmen year, saying it was too pricey for him - and thinks before he spends money. We are the frugal ones. Dh and other dc spend on crap
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talk to your payroll department about setting up direct transfers to college savings, 401k, whatever other savings you need, and only the net to your joint checking account. If they are anything like my spendthrift spouse, the only way to get them to stop spending is to run out of money in the checking account.
That doesn’t work. Then the spender just runs up credit cards.
How does a prenup work. Does it shield you from spousal debt? Like let’s say I have $1M protected in a prenup trust, and spouse blows $500k, are we both on hook?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Talk to your payroll department about setting up direct transfers to college savings, 401k, whatever other savings you need, and only the net to your joint checking account. If they are anything like my spendthrift spouse, the only way to get them to stop spending is to run out of money in the checking account.
That doesn’t work. Then the spender just runs up credit cards.
Anonymous wrote:Talk to your payroll department about setting up direct transfers to college savings, 401k, whatever other savings you need, and only the net to your joint checking account. If they are anything like my spendthrift spouse, the only way to get them to stop spending is to run out of money in the checking account.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I am infuriated on your behalf. The fact that your DH has recruited your son to act the same way as him makes it 10x worse.
+1
It's not only a financial issue, it's a marital and parenting issue. It is emblematic of DH's lack of basic respect for his wife.
How many wives do the exact same thing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I am infuriated on your behalf. The fact that your DH has recruited your son to act the same way as him makes it 10x worse.
+1
It's not only a financial issue, it's a marital and parenting issue. It is emblematic of DH's lack of basic respect for his wife.
Anonymous wrote:OMG. This scenario would drive me crazy. No specific advice but just wanted to say I hope you figure out a plan to deal with this and that your husband gets a job soon.
One thing I would focus on is your son. You can control that more easily. Where is he getting the money for all this? My sons could not spend like this because they don't have access to our credit cards. You need to cut off access to the son's spending money and put him on a tighter budget.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I am infuriated on your behalf. The fact that your DH has recruited your son to act the same way as him makes it 10x worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With the use of debit and credit cards, it is very easy to see where money is going. Do you have a budget? If not, you both need to do a deep dive on where your money is going. The numbers don’t lie.
We don’t share credit cards or a bank account