Anonymous
Post 09/17/2018 22:09     Subject: Re:Breadwinner wants out of the rat race

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:"Some people are so poor, all they have is money." Your true wealth is in your FAMILY--learn to appreciate that and not a "lifestyle" and you will be happier.


Pope Francis, is that you?


Someday you will understand that quote...sad for you that you don't currently.
Anonymous
Post 09/17/2018 20:26     Subject: Breadwinner wants out of the rat race

How's the sex?
Anonymous
Post 09/17/2018 12:48     Subject: Re:Breadwinner wants out of the rat race

Anonymous wrote:"Some people are so poor, all they have is money." Your true wealth is in your FAMILY--learn to appreciate that and not a "lifestyle" and you will be happier.


Pope Francis, is that you?
Anonymous
Post 09/16/2018 23:23     Subject: Re:Breadwinner wants out of the rat race

"Some people are so poor, all they have is money." Your true wealth is in your FAMILY--learn to appreciate that and not a "lifestyle" and you will be happier.
Anonymous
Post 09/14/2018 15:39     Subject: Breadwinner wants out of the rat race

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m the breadwinner and my husband works at a non-profit making decent but not big four money he could be making as a senior auditor somewhere else. We have a three year old and a baby on the way. Let me just say, you start to resent the hell out of your partner when you’re pulling these 60-70 hour weeks. I do not feel like I should have to kill myself to maintain a certain lifestyle. We are having the same conversations and it does feel like DH “expects” me to pull this big salary. All the while I’ve had one miscarriage and already been to the emergency room due to my hyperemesis with this pregnancy. If your partner is saying he can’t or doesn’t want to handle it anymore all need to be able to readjust their expectations. For their sanity and your marriage and family life. Otherwise, it’s going to become the resentment show. It’s a partnership not a bargain.



Unless you explicitly had a discussion several years ago where you decided one of you needed to downsize career so other could focus on making partner, your situation isn’t at all the same.


It is the same. Having a discussion doesn't act as a permanent contract for misery. Particularly in the law firm context, where associates have no idea what it means to be a partner (and in OPs case, she quit before kids; OPs belief she would have made partner is delusional).

If you are holding a miserable spouse to a conversation had years before kids or the reality of years of 70 hour weeks, you are a sociopathic jerk.



No one is talking about holding him to a contract, the situations simply aren’t analogous because you are not her and vice versa. By the way, having been one, most senior associates actually have a very good idea of what it being a partner is like.

It sounds like you are looking for ways to belittle others because of your own unhappiness. Food for thought.


Not sure what was belittling about that post? Do you think making a spouse stay in a miserable, 70 hour week job based on a conversation had years before is acceptable, healthy behavior?

In any event you sound super defensive. What are you holding your.poor spouse to?


+1. PP is a dumbass. Maybe she is OP