Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how old are you? I had a similar experience with someone in early 50s. He claimed not saving anything, and being poor and overly lived a very frugal lifestyle. I worked my whole life, and left my marriage with few million saved in early 40s. Once I gave him a clear statement that all our joint trips will be "on budget" with both contributing 50/50, and all international trips would be just for me and my family members, it ended very quickly.
Make it clear to him that there won't be moving in, marriage and agree on dating expenses split 50/50. Then see what happens
Maybe OP thought she would marry up, then became enlightened that all the good ones are not interested in her. It happens more often than you would think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it interesting how many divorced people out there, usually men, claim a divorce drove them to bankruptcy or that their wife took everything. There is always something more to the story. I’m sure there is one-in-a-thousand case where the person did everything right but their ex somehow stole everything and/or left them with the debt, but most of the time that is not the case.
My ex and I started marriage with nothing and were poor by DCUM standards. Divorced 12 years in and each took half of 500k net worth and lawyers got about 2k. A few years later our individual net worths are about as much as our combined net worth was 5 years ago before the divorce. Getting divorced is not an excuse to make dumb decisions and not save and invest.
NP here. Regardless, I am shocked how many second marriages have a spouse that married in that was "unaware" that the wife made/had all or most of the money and assets, and in many cases, the husband did claim bankruptcy. I find it perplexing that more second wives do not do their homework, and marry what they think someone has - their loss, I guess. But I would expect more common sense and due diligence. Are some people only looking for appearances? At that age??
My ex’s AP did not take into account a good portion of our wealth and multiple homes was due to 25 years of our joint salaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it interesting how many divorced people out there, usually men, claim a divorce drove them to bankruptcy or that their wife took everything. There is always something more to the story. I’m sure there is one-in-a-thousand case where the person did everything right but their ex somehow stole everything and/or left them with the debt, but most of the time that is not the case.
My ex and I started marriage with nothing and were poor by DCUM standards. Divorced 12 years in and each took half of 500k net worth and lawyers got about 2k. A few years later our individual net worths are about as much as our combined net worth was 5 years ago before the divorce. Getting divorced is not an excuse to make dumb decisions and not save and invest.
NP here. Regardless, I am shocked how many second marriages have a spouse that married in that was "unaware" that the wife made/had all or most of the money and assets, and in many cases, the husband did claim bankruptcy. I find it perplexing that more second wives do not do their homework, and marry what they think someone has - their loss, I guess. But I would expect more common sense and due diligence. Are some people only looking for appearances? At that age??
My ex’s AP did not take into account a good portion of our wealth and multiple homes was due to 25 years of our joint salaries.
+1. Exactly. Plus, the woman's family money or money that the woman has/had. Some AP's are stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it interesting how many divorced people out there, usually men, claim a divorce drove them to bankruptcy or that their wife took everything. There is always something more to the story. I’m sure there is one-in-a-thousand case where the person did everything right but their ex somehow stole everything and/or left them with the debt, but most of the time that is not the case.
My ex and I started marriage with nothing and were poor by DCUM standards. Divorced 12 years in and each took half of 500k net worth and lawyers got about 2k. A few years later our individual net worths are about as much as our combined net worth was 5 years ago before the divorce. Getting divorced is not an excuse to make dumb decisions and not save and invest.
NP here. Regardless, I am shocked how many second marriages have a spouse that married in that was "unaware" that the wife made/had all or most of the money and assets, and in many cases, the husband did claim bankruptcy. I find it perplexing that more second wives do not do their homework, and marry what they think someone has - their loss, I guess. But I would expect more common sense and due diligence. Are some people only looking for appearances? At that age??
My ex’s AP did not take into account a good portion of our wealth and multiple homes was due to 25 years of our joint salaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how old are you? I had a similar experience with someone in early 50s. He claimed not saving anything, and being poor and overly lived a very frugal lifestyle. I worked my whole life, and left my marriage with few million saved in early 40s. Once I gave him a clear statement that all our joint trips will be "on budget" with both contributing 50/50, and all international trips would be just for me and my family members, it ended very quickly.
Make it clear to him that there won't be moving in, marriage and agree on dating expenses split 50/50. Then see what happens
Maybe OP thought she would marry up, then became enlightened that all the good ones are not interested in her. It happens more often than you would think.
Especially to the cheaters. The rich good looking married ones will bang them no strings, but never want an actual real relationship with them. It’s not as easy when your not a side piece anymore- pickings are slim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it interesting how many divorced people out there, usually men, claim a divorce drove them to bankruptcy or that their wife took everything. There is always something more to the story. I’m sure there is one-in-a-thousand case where the person did everything right but their ex somehow stole everything and/or left them with the debt, but most of the time that is not the case.
My ex and I started marriage with nothing and were poor by DCUM standards. Divorced 12 years in and each took half of 500k net worth and lawyers got about 2k. A few years later our individual net worths are about as much as our combined net worth was 5 years ago before the divorce. Getting divorced is not an excuse to make dumb decisions and not save and invest.
NP here. Regardless, I am shocked how many second marriages have a spouse that married in that was "unaware" that the wife made/had all or most of the money and assets, and in many cases, the husband did claim bankruptcy. I find it perplexing that more second wives do not do their homework, and marry what they think someone has - their loss, I guess. But I would expect more common sense and due diligence. Are some people only looking for appearances? At that age??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how old are you? I had a similar experience with someone in early 50s. He claimed not saving anything, and being poor and overly lived a very frugal lifestyle. I worked my whole life, and left my marriage with few million saved in early 40s. Once I gave him a clear statement that all our joint trips will be "on budget" with both contributing 50/50, and all international trips would be just for me and my family members, it ended very quickly.
Make it clear to him that there won't be moving in, marriage and agree on dating expenses split 50/50. Then see what happens
Maybe OP thought she would marry up, then became enlightened that all the good ones are not interested in her. It happens more often than you would think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how old are you? I had a similar experience with someone in early 50s. He claimed not saving anything, and being poor and overly lived a very frugal lifestyle. I worked my whole life, and left my marriage with few million saved in early 40s. Once I gave him a clear statement that all our joint trips will be "on budget" with both contributing 50/50, and all international trips would be just for me and my family members, it ended very quickly.
Make it clear to him that there won't be moving in, marriage and agree on dating expenses split 50/50. Then see what happens
Maybe OP thought she would marry up, then became enlightened that all the good ones are not interested in her. It happens more often than you would think.
Anonymous wrote:OP, how old are you? I had a similar experience with someone in early 50s. He claimed not saving anything, and being poor and overly lived a very frugal lifestyle. I worked my whole life, and left my marriage with few million saved in early 40s. Once I gave him a clear statement that all our joint trips will be "on budget" with both contributing 50/50, and all international trips would be just for me and my family members, it ended very quickly.
Make it clear to him that there won't be moving in, marriage and agree on dating expenses split 50/50. Then see what happens