Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I had $5-15m in my twenties, I would look for a man who (1) adores me, (2) is a fabulous cook and his love language is cooking for me, (3) prioritizes fitness, (4) loves kids and expresses an interested in being a very involved father, (5) has high integrity, (6) comes from a good family, and (7) has some shared hobbies with me.
OP, if you are an attractive woman in your twenties with that much money, you can have anyone! So be very picky. Date as many men as you need to until you find someone that you really love and who loves you back.
What would you be picky for? Kindness? Good heart? Connection? Personality? Looks? Career potential? Income?
Especially if sometimes income/impressive career can come with negative personality traits?
How would you take into account combining finances and leaving enough for future generations?
Anonymous wrote:Not one of the people replying here have 5 to 15M.
Anonymous wrote:If I had $5-15m in my twenties, I would look for a man who (1) adores me, (2) is a fabulous cook and his love language is cooking for me, (3) prioritizes fitness, (4) loves kids and expresses an interested in being a very involved father, (5) has high integrity, (6) comes from a good family, and (7) has some shared hobbies with me.
OP, if you are an attractive woman in your twenties with that much money, you can have anyone! So be very picky. Date as many men as you need to until you find someone that you really love and who loves you back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have an equally educated partner. Now? A gorgeous well dressed and mannered boy toy 10 to 15 years younger
Ha, now that I’m older, it’s this.
But assuming I’m young like the OP asked: I would ideally want a man with a high earning potential, but that will drastically limit your choices. Men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands.
I would rather have a good guy than a rich guy, BUT I would:
1. Not let him know about the money until after engagement but before marriage. That amount of money will change how someone sees you. You want to filter out for gold diggers, but also give enough time before marriage to see if he starts trying to spend that money.
2. Prenup and that money is yours. Not to be spent on frivolous things like vacations or toys. Use it to build generational wealth for your kids.
3. Go for a solid career because you never know what will happen BUT save that money in case you want to be a SAHM later on.
4. Probably the biggest one: get premarital counseling specifically around money and finances. Finances are the #1 cause of divorce, and you want to make sure you are both on the same page about money. And if you can’t get on the same page, don’t be afraid to break it off.
Curious why you said men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands. Can you elaborate?
I've known a lot of wealthy men and I wouldn't want to be married to most of them. Typically controlling, yell a lot, cheat, see women as conquests, etc. Once a multi-millionaire asked me on a date; when I showed up at his house, he was doing coke with a stripper. Ended up hanging out with the stripper and she said he screams at her all the time.
I know someone will say "not all men!" but in my experience of spending time with millionaires and billionaires, they just don't make good husbands. Just look at the richest men in the world - nearly all of them have multiple divorces, cheating, abuse allegations, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I am a high earning woman, but I didn’t have $5 million when I was young and looking for a partner to create a family with. I was still in school.
Anonymous wrote:Not one of the people replying here have 5 to 15M.
Anonymous wrote:I’m looking for a true connection - intellectual and physical. I don’t know if a rural dude or someone who never went for a theater play would be a good match to me
I tend to date university professors
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have an equally educated partner. Now? A gorgeous well dressed and mannered boy toy 10 to 15 years younger
Ha, now that I’m older, it’s this.
But assuming I’m young like the OP asked: I would ideally want a man with a high earning potential, but that will drastically limit your choices. Men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands.
I would rather have a good guy than a rich guy, BUT I would:
1. Not let him know about the money until after engagement but before marriage. That amount of money will change how someone sees you. You want to filter out for gold diggers, but also give enough time before marriage to see if he starts trying to spend that money.
2. Prenup and that money is yours. Not to be spent on frivolous things like vacations or toys. Use it to build generational wealth for your kids.
3. Go for a solid career because you never know what will happen BUT save that money in case you want to be a SAHM later on.
4. Probably the biggest one: get premarital counseling specifically around money and finances. Finances are the #1 cause of divorce, and you want to make sure you are both on the same page about money. And if you can’t get on the same page, don’t be afraid to break it off.
Curious why you said men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands. Can you elaborate?
I've known a lot of wealthy men and I wouldn't want to be married to most of them. Typically controlling, yell a lot, cheat, see women as conquests, etc. Once a multi-millionaire asked me on a date; when I showed up at his house, he was doing coke with a stripper. Ended up hanging out with the stripper and she said he screams at her all the time.
I know someone will say "not all men!" but in my experience of spending time with millionaires and billionaires, they just don't make good husbands. Just look at the richest men in the world - nearly all of them have multiple divorces, cheating, abuse allegations, etc.
There's a big difference between a millionaire (most people on this site over 40) and a billionaire.
Anonymous wrote:Women care how much money a man makes. His money is her money, too.
A good man worth having does not care how much money a woman makes. He knows that her money will never be his money. Her money is her money, his money is their money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have an equally educated partner. Now? A gorgeous well dressed and mannered boy toy 10 to 15 years younger
Ha, now that I’m older, it’s this.
But assuming I’m young like the OP asked: I would ideally want a man with a high earning potential, but that will drastically limit your choices. Men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands.
I would rather have a good guy than a rich guy, BUT I would:
1. Not let him know about the money until after engagement but before marriage. That amount of money will change how someone sees you. You want to filter out for gold diggers, but also give enough time before marriage to see if he starts trying to spend that money.
2. Prenup and that money is yours. Not to be spent on frivolous things like vacations or toys. Use it to build generational wealth for your kids.
3. Go for a solid career because you never know what will happen BUT save that money in case you want to be a SAHM later on.
4. Probably the biggest one: get premarital counseling specifically around money and finances. Finances are the #1 cause of divorce, and you want to make sure you are both on the same page about money. And if you can’t get on the same page, don’t be afraid to break it off.
Also, what does it mean to you be on the same page about money? What would you want to be on the same page about?
What if the woman cares about money and a certain lifestyle and the man does not care about the lifestyle beyond financial security?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have an equally educated partner. Now? A gorgeous well dressed and mannered boy toy 10 to 15 years younger
Ha, now that I’m older, it’s this.
But assuming I’m young like the OP asked: I would ideally want a man with a high earning potential, but that will drastically limit your choices. Men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands.
I would rather have a good guy than a rich guy, BUT I would:
1. Not let him know about the money until after engagement but before marriage. That amount of money will change how someone sees you. You want to filter out for gold diggers, but also give enough time before marriage to see if he starts trying to spend that money.
2. Prenup and that money is yours. Not to be spent on frivolous things like vacations or toys. Use it to build generational wealth for your kids.
3. Go for a solid career because you never know what will happen BUT save that money in case you want to be a SAHM later on.
4. Probably the biggest one: get premarital counseling specifically around money and finances. Finances are the #1 cause of divorce, and you want to make sure you are both on the same page about money. And if you can’t get on the same page, don’t be afraid to break it off.
Curious why you said men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands. Can you elaborate?
I've known a lot of wealthy men and I wouldn't want to be married to most of them. Typically controlling, yell a lot, cheat, see women as conquests, etc. Once a multi-millionaire asked me on a date; when I showed up at his house, he was doing coke with a stripper. Ended up hanging out with the stripper and she said he screams at her all the time.
I know someone will say "not all men!" but in my experience of spending time with millionaires and billionaires, they just don't make good husbands. Just look at the richest men in the world - nearly all of them have multiple divorces, cheating, abuse allegations, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have an equally educated partner. Now? A gorgeous well dressed and mannered boy toy 10 to 15 years younger
Ha, now that I’m older, it’s this.
But assuming I’m young like the OP asked: I would ideally want a man with a high earning potential, but that will drastically limit your choices. Men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands.
I would rather have a good guy than a rich guy, BUT I would:
1. Not let him know about the money until after engagement but before marriage. That amount of money will change how someone sees you. You want to filter out for gold diggers, but also give enough time before marriage to see if he starts trying to spend that money.
2. Prenup and that money is yours. Not to be spent on frivolous things like vacations or toys. Use it to build generational wealth for your kids.
3. Go for a solid career because you never know what will happen BUT save that money in case you want to be a SAHM later on.
4. Probably the biggest one: get premarital counseling specifically around money and finances. Finances are the #1 cause of divorce, and you want to make sure you are both on the same page about money. And if you can’t get on the same page, don’t be afraid to break it off.
Curious why you said men with money typically aren’t the greatest husbands. Can you elaborate?