Anonymous wrote:Women are such bad liars.
A woman married to a 30 year old Sales engineer with a trust fund AND who brings in at least 200k per year, not including bonus, nonchalantly says, "oh, I don't care much for money"
LOL That is why you specifically selected for a guy who had the kind of degree and job prospects to give you the life you want in addition to ensuring he had generational wealth.
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Anonymous wrote:What salary makes a guy marriage material?
I’d say 150k+ preferably 250k+
Anonymous wrote:100% of single women want a top 10% man in terms of salary and money. It is pure delusion. The average man earns around $50,000, not $250,000. It's especially delusional for single women in their mid to late 30s or divorced in their 40s to think they'll land this 10% guy and they won't settle for less. It's all Disney pipe dreams. Just get some cats instead. They are all you will have in the end with this mindset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my 20s, I focused on my OWN salary. I picked a major, went to grad school, in something I knew would allow me to find a good job and I'd be interested in as well.
I had no 'salary requirements' and I met my husband when he was 24 (close to 25) and I was 26. I was making slightly more than him then. He was smart as hell, good looking, funny, athletic and had a degree from a good university.
Over time he was making double and triple my salary (my salary is very good). But, when we met there was no guarantee he would be such a high earner.
I picked the man, not the $.
Women should focus on earning their own $.
That’s fine if you plan to raise kids and support your spouse for 50+ years on whatever you can make alone. That goes for both genders. But lots of people find it difficult to manage that on one salary. Which is when resentment can start to build that your partner earns so much less. And you might begin controlling how your spouse spends since you are the one contributing much more. I saw this in my friend group. Couples having fights over groceries and toiletries when the issue is really a $30k or more pay gap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my 20s, I focused on my OWN salary. I picked a major, went to grad school, in something I knew would allow me to find a good job and I'd be interested in as well.
I had no 'salary requirements' and I met my husband when he was 24 (close to 25) and I was 26. I was making slightly more than him then. He was smart as hell, good looking, funny, athletic and had a degree from a good university.
Over time he was making double and triple my salary (my salary is very good). But, when we met there was no guarantee he would be such a high earner.
I picked the man, not the $.
Women should focus on earning their own $.
That’s fine if you plan to raise kids and support your spouse for 50+ years on whatever you can make alone. That goes for both genders. But lots of people find it difficult to manage that on one salary. Which is when resentment can start to build that your partner earns so much less. And you might begin controlling how your spouse spends since you are the one contributing much more. I saw this in my friend group. Couples having fights over groceries and toiletries when the issue is really a $30k or more pay gap.
Anonymous wrote:When I met DH ~6 yrs ago I was making $45K, he was making $95K. Now, we both make ~$200K each and are perfectly comfortable.
What stage of life are you in, OP? I'd have different "requirements" meeting someone at 25 than at 40.
Anonymous wrote:In my 20s, I focused on my OWN salary. I picked a major, went to grad school, in something I knew would allow me to find a good job and I'd be interested in as well.
I had no 'salary requirements' and I met my husband when he was 24 (close to 25) and I was 26. I was making slightly more than him then. He was smart as hell, good looking, funny, athletic and had a degree from a good university.
Over time he was making double and triple my salary (my salary is very good). But, when we met there was no guarantee he would be such a high earner.
I picked the man, not the $.
Women should focus on earning their own $.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What salary makes a guy marriage material?
I’d say 150k+ preferably 250k+
Who thinks like this?
People inside the bubble that is the D.C. area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What salary makes a guy marriage material?
I’d say 150k+ preferably 250k+
Who thinks like this?