Anonymous wrote:Can he take classes only part time?
Anonymous wrote:I think an MBA program at his age is quite likely a huge waste of money. However, if he can find some way to do one for free then I don't see the problem.
I have a friend who put a lot of time and effort into studying for the GMAT a few years ago and was able to obtain a full-tuition scholarship at Georgetown (and less generous scholarships at much better schools). I also know someone who is going to Cornell's MBA program for free. I'd imagine this would be difficult to do but if your husband can actually put in the leg work to get a substantial scholarship then you should let him do it. He sounds like his current life is not fulfilling to him.
It does not sound like he ever agreed to permanently be a stay at home dad. Which...of course it is nice to have someone at home for you. But if you guys are retired how young could your kids actually be? How boring and lonely for him to be at home all day without the kids! This isn't a knock on stay at home parents but no one should have to do that unless that is their passion.
Even if he doesn't do the masters program. You need to stop thinking of him as just a person who helps out with the kids and is a good cook but as a partner who also has needs that you should consider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:M He talks about flipping homes for income, but I am against it.
Why are you against it? It sounds like an excellent use of his home-improvement skills. And gives him the flexibility to work around the kids schedule. He can work while they are at school and if he needs to do more, he can do it after you come home from work.
If you are concerned about the financial aspects, have him start up and LLC, put the starter money there, and he can pay himself a salary from the LLC when there is money to pay out. It keeps the business assets separate from the family assets. He gets paid when the business has money to pay him. He doesn't otherwise. The money earned from one job will then be used to pay for expenses of future jobs.
Is there another reason you are against it?
Anonymous wrote:M He talks about flipping homes for income, but I am against it.
Anonymous wrote:Usually retired military officers already have one or more Master's Degrees. Doesn't he have them? What are additional MAs going to do for him?
I wouldn't advise anyone over 50 to get an MA. Chance of payoff is low. Unless your job is paying for it, or something.
He'd be much better off putting his time and energy into writing a book. Or getting a better job.
If he insists on doing an MA, try to find a cheap online program...