Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friends ended up in this situation.
She had a Phd; he had an IT job with good pay but never went to college.
He became the SAHD. She soon cheated on him with someone from her work.
She no longer respected him, to no one’s surprise.
They are divorced now.
Studies show infidelity is highest for men whose wives' out earn them substantially. I don't know if it's that they feel emasculated and/or just have more time.
Anonymous wrote:Friends ended up in this situation.
She had a Phd; he had an IT job with good pay but never went to college.
He became the SAHD. She soon cheated on him with someone from her work.
She no longer respected him, to no one’s surprise.
They are divorced now.
Anonymous wrote:Friends ended up in this situation.
She had a Phd; he had an IT job with good pay but never went to college.
He became the SAHD. She soon cheated on him with someone from her work.
She no longer respected him, to no one’s surprise.
They are divorced now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the breadwinner - hubby makes about 100k and I make around 800k. I love it because we can afford to outsource all the things that I hate doing (laundry, cleaning, yard, etc.), and he loves to cook so breakfast and dinner are always taken care of so that I can focus on the kids for a few hours. He also does good for the world in his profession, so it makes me feel OK (eh, kind of) about being a corporate sellout.
I think it's harder on him - because the difference in salary doesn't mean a commensurate difference in hours. I probably only work 20% more than him. So he probably picks up more than his share of the house/kid duties based purely on the fact that I make more money...which isn't necessarily fair.
What do you do for a living?
Anonymous wrote:Friends ended up in this situation.
She had a Phd; he had an IT job with good pay but never went to college.
He became the SAHD. She soon cheated on him with someone from her work.
She no longer respected him, to no one’s surprise.
They are divorced now.
Anonymous wrote:It’s actually better than when we had roughly equal salaries. I was working and doing the lion’s share of household work and feeling bitter. Now DH pulls his weight around the house and I’d say he does 60% of the home stuff.
Anonymous wrote:I was the breadwinner for a while when he was getting a second bachelors/doctorate. It was when we were starting our family and I didn’t like it. I felt like I had to give birth, breastfeed, maternity leave etc and make all the money. But it is now over and he makes more than me. I love that. When I see/hear of wives that have sahd husbands I think they got the short end of the stick. I would resent it. However, I realize many consider the his old-fashioned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the breadwinner - hubby makes about 100k and I make around 800k. I love it because we can afford to outsource all the things that I hate doing (laundry, cleaning, yard, etc.), and he loves to cook so breakfast and dinner are always taken care of so that I can focus on the kids for a few hours. He also does good for the world in his profession, so it makes me feel OK (eh, kind of) about being a corporate sellout.
I think it's harder on him - because the difference in salary doesn't mean a commensurate difference in hours. I probably only work 20% more than him. So he probably picks up more than his share of the house/kid duties based purely on the fact that I make more money...which isn't necessarily fair.
What do you do for a living?
Anonymous wrote:I'm the breadwinner - hubby makes about 100k and I make around 800k. I love it because we can afford to outsource all the things that I hate doing (laundry, cleaning, yard, etc.), and he loves to cook so breakfast and dinner are always taken care of so that I can focus on the kids for a few hours. He also does good for the world in his profession, so it makes me feel OK (eh, kind of) about being a corporate sellout.
I think it's harder on him - because the difference in salary doesn't mean a commensurate difference in hours. I probably only work 20% more than him. So he probably picks up more than his share of the house/kid duties based purely on the fact that I make more money...which isn't necessarily fair.