Anonymous wrote:You cannot be a good mother and have a career. Sounds like you both have different priorities and it will never work.
Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend and I have a beautiful connection. both of us are marriage minded. There is one issue that’s giving me pause and I’d like to know what others think.
I am ambitious and probably make a little more than him. He is somewhat traditional on gender roles. he doesn’t want me to work long hours, and I get the feeling he does not want me to climb the corporate ladder.
I’ve told him in marriage I’d compromise on long hours. But I have this feeling he may generally speaking resent me for being ambitious down the road. I have no plans of stopping being career driven though I can dial back hours.
Everything else is golden between us. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:He's actually not traditional at all. A traditional man who wants his wife to work less would level up his career and MAKE MORE MONEY so his wife doesn't need to. But he's not doing that, is he? Instead he's content with wanting you to hold back on what you're truly capable of to assuage his ego. He's a traditional HATER. I have seen this play out so many times before. His jealousy will slowly grind you into dust.
Anonymous wrote:& for those saying ambition may change - true. But the question is that this may be a guy who believes she should do all the work related to kids, the home, etc. -- which seems a bit 1950s. Ifthe OP wants to enter a 1950s marriage, that's fine. But in my obersations, it will only get MUCH worse once kids are in the picture.
Anonymous wrote:OP you seem to be saying that your BF wouldn’t be supportive of your career plans and it’s not because he doesn’t want you to have a stressful job with long hours or because he wants the two of you to enjoy life and not be focused on work. It sounds like like your BF doesn’t want you to be ambitious bc he may want a SAHW or his insecurities are triggered by having an ambitious wife who may be more successful than him or he has expectations for his partner that are focused on his needs instead of your wants and dreams. The issue here is what is driving his preferences. It sounds like you may have a fundamental difference in how you approach this and it will become a huge issue later on in your marriage. I would try to get to the bottom of what is driving this for him but it doesn’t sound good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might not be so ambitious down the road. You need to be prepared for both of you to evolve (possibly) as you mature and as your life circumstances change. That’s the most important thing—not so much how you feel about your career at this moment in time.
+1 Things change a lot over the years/decades.
Anonymous wrote:You might not be so ambitious down the road. You need to be prepared for both of you to evolve (possibly) as you mature and as your life circumstances change. That’s the most important thing—not so much how you feel about your career at this moment in time.
Anonymous wrote:You might not be so ambitious down the road. You need to be prepared for both of you to evolve (possibly) as you mature and as your life circumstances change. That’s the most important thing—not so much how you feel about your career at this moment in time.
Anonymous wrote:
You two see things differently. More than likely will not work.
I'd move on.