Anonymous wrote:Yes, absolutely I did. All the people on this thread saying "no" are either not telling the truth or made bad choices. I always considered whether or not my date or bf was going to make enough money so I could live a good life. Its dumb not to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're picking a spouse based on a finite metric, such as how many acorns he can collect, then that marriage won't last very long because there'll always be some smarter and quicker squirrel. If we're picking a spouse based on his work, I'd rather base it on how much passion he has in his work and whether he has vision of where he'll end up, rather than just thinking about how many acorns he can collect. Anecdotally speaking, a great high school teacher who can inspire hundreds of future leaders will never ever come close to the salary of money hungry lobbyist for a company like Marlboro.
True. But if you pick a spouse who won’t collect acorns at all, that marriage will not last because it’s really stressful to have to take on all the responsibility in what should be a partnership.
Tell me again how “acorns” don’t matter when it’s winter and you have nothing to offer your children.
Anonymous wrote:No. Jesus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eww. You're perpetuating the worst stereotypes about women being gold-diggers.
When I started dating my husband, he was a scruffy guy just out of grad school making $35K/year. He drove a crappy car that barely worked and survived on tacos from 24-hour taco stands. I saw his potential and fell in love with him. Fast forward 6 years and he's making $230K/year + stock.
Hilarious. You tried to say ‘no’ but really said ‘yes’ — obviously you were not happy with his current salary when you were dating.
I saw his potential AS A PERSON. Jeez.
HE wasn't happy with his salary at the time, given that he was on the brink of bankruptcy. This was in the middle of the recession. He wanted more for himself and I admired that.
You’re being intentionally obtuse. This is the equivalent of a surgeon’s wife saying - “ oh we got married when he was a resident making 50K - I don’t care about money at all” wink, wink.
Anonymous wrote:Did you only date men above a certain income?
Anonymous wrote:If you're picking a spouse based on a finite metric, such as how many acorns he can collect, then that marriage won't last very long because there'll always be some smarter and quicker squirrel. If we're picking a spouse based on his work, I'd rather base it on how much passion he has in his work and whether he has vision of where he'll end up, rather than just thinking about how many acorns he can collect. Anecdotally speaking, a great high school teacher who can inspire hundreds of future leaders will never ever come close to the salary of money hungry lobbyist for a company like Marlboro.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eww. You're perpetuating the worst stereotypes about women being gold-diggers.
When I started dating my husband, he was a scruffy guy just out of grad school making $35K/year. He drove a crappy car that barely worked and survived on tacos from 24-hour taco stands. I saw his potential and fell in love with him. Fast forward 6 years and he's making $230K/year + stock.
Hilarious. You tried to say ‘no’ but really said ‘yes’ — obviously you were not happy with his current salary when you were dating.
I saw his potential AS A PERSON. Jeez.
HE wasn't happy with his salary at the time, given that he was on the brink of bankruptcy. This was in the middle of the recession. He wanted more for himself and I admired that.