Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, he’s made between 1-4 million in the last five years, you have 1 car, 2 kids not yet in school, don’t travel, and you don’t have millionS in savings??? Don’t you invest?
You should be set for life. What are you spending money on? Drugs?
I call fake on this.
OP here - of course we have millions in savings. That is what we are doing with our money - saving it. Like I said in a previous post, it doesn’t feel like anything will be a safe amount or give my family security due to how I grew up. I realize that rationally that is an out of touch thing to say. Sorry I’m not fake, or trying to be a jerk. It is something I am struggling with, like it or not.
I say this with kindness, but have you considered therapy to work through some of this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, he’s made between 1-4 million in the last five years, you have 1 car, 2 kids not yet in school, don’t travel, and you don’t have millionS in savings??? Don’t you invest?
You should be set for life. What are you spending money on? Drugs?
I call fake on this.
OP here - of course we have millions in savings. That is what we are doing with our money - saving it. Like I said in a previous post, it doesn’t feel like anything will be a safe amount or give my family security due to how I grew up. I realize that rationally that is an out of touch thing to say. Sorry I’m not fake, or trying to be a jerk. It is something I am struggling with, like it or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the stupidest post and is another data point showing that big salary does not equal big brains (assuming your husband didn’t deliberately marry a complete nincompoop and is therefore also not that bright).
Why do you need to crowdsource on a mommy message board whether or not finances are a consideration in staying home with your kids when your husband’s income is over a MILLION dollars a year? Why can’t you figure out how to have your husband contribute to a retirement account on your behalf if you’re worried about that? Why can’t the two of you save a huge chunk of that massive income so you don’t have to worry about things going catastrophically bad?
Ridiculous. I kind of hope you’re just a troll.
Sorry nope not a troll or an idiot! Didn’t grow up with money/experienced lots of instability growing up due to money, so probably nothing will ever feel like a “safe” amount. We do save a huge portion of our income, like I said above we take no vacations, one car, reasonable mortgage - we are not blowing through cash.
I just was looking for ancedata - if people making all different amounts were happy with their decision, then that would be useful to me to know. If there were tons of regrets across the income spectrum, also helpful to know. Maybe you wouldn’t find that helpful and that’s ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, he’s made between 1-4 million in the last five years, you have 1 car, 2 kids not yet in school, don’t travel, and you don’t have millionS in savings??? Don’t you invest?
You should be set for life. What are you spending money on? Drugs?
I call fake on this.
OP here - of course we have millions in savings. That is what we are doing with our money - saving it. Like I said in a previous post, it doesn’t feel like anything will be a safe amount or give my family security due to how I grew up. I realize that rationally that is an out of touch thing to say. Sorry I’m not fake, or trying to be a jerk. It is something I am struggling with, like it or not.
It's not irrational to not want to give up your career, your livelihood, your way to earn money. It's a risk. You guys could lose your savings thru a lawsuit or family crisis or cancer diagnosis. Your husband could become disabled. You could get divorced.
Feeling hesitant about whether you want to give up your ability to support yourself is not irrational and you do not need to apologize for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, he’s made between 1-4 million in the last five years, you have 1 car, 2 kids not yet in school, don’t travel, and you don’t have millionS in savings??? Don’t you invest?
You should be set for life. What are you spending money on? Drugs?
I call fake on this.
OP here - of course we have millions in savings. That is what we are doing with our money - saving it. Like I said in a previous post, it doesn’t feel like anything will be a safe amount or give my family security due to how I grew up. I realize that rationally that is an out of touch thing to say. Sorry I’m not fake, or trying to be a jerk. It is something I am struggling with, like it or not.
It's not irrational to not want to give up your career, your livelihood, your way to earn money. It's a risk. You guys could lose your savings thru a lawsuit or family crisis or cancer diagnosis. Your husband could become disabled. You could get divorced.
Feeling hesitant about whether you want to give up your ability to support yourself is not irrational and you do not need to apologize for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, he’s made between 1-4 million in the last five years, you have 1 car, 2 kids not yet in school, don’t travel, and you don’t have millionS in savings??? Don’t you invest?
You should be set for life. What are you spending money on? Drugs?
I call fake on this.
OP here - of course we have millions in savings. That is what we are doing with our money - saving it. Like I said in a previous post, it doesn’t feel like anything will be a safe amount or give my family security due to how I grew up. I realize that rationally that is an out of touch thing to say. Sorry I’m not fake, or trying to be a jerk. It is something I am struggling with, like it or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Consider what your children will learn by watching a smart capable women’s who is entirely dependent upon a man for food and shelter, like one of his children.
She focuses on child care and home management. ( I mean when the kids are older, not babies. )
Don’t you think that will influence their perceptions of the genders?
You are the only one with warped perceptions, hope you don't pass it on to your kids but you likely have
NP. Jumping in on this one because the scenario above was my parents, but worse. My father used money to control my mom - literally gave her cash in an envelope every month and that was it. To this day, my mom doesn't know how much they have in their estate or what will happen to her when he dies or if he leaves her. She budgets based on cash in the envelope. For whatever warped reason, he was very supportive of his daughters' education and paid for all of it and I'm grateful. However, my parents' weird dynamic, which was partly my mom's fault, greatly affected my and my sister's life choices - we both work and do well. My brother married a woman with a good career.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry, he’s made between 1-4 million in the last five years, you have 1 car, 2 kids not yet in school, don’t travel, and you don’t have millionS in savings??? Don’t you invest?
You should be set for life. What are you spending money on? Drugs?
I call fake on this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom was a SAHM and strongly encouraged me to keep my job after DD was born. I was going to do that anyway, as I remember how unhappy my mom was. When she went back to work part-time, it was better for everyone.
But not everyone feels the same way or had the same experience, of course.
Anonymous wrote:My mom was a SAHM and strongly encouraged me to keep my job after DD was born. I was going to do that anyway, as I remember how unhappy my mom was. When she went back to work part-time, it was better for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Consider what your children will learn by watching a smart capable women’s who is entirely dependent upon a man for food and shelter, like one of his children.
She focuses on child care and home management. ( I mean when the kids are older, not babies. )
Don’t you think that will influence their perceptions of the genders?
You are the only one with warped perceptions, hope you don't pass it on to your kids but you likely have
NP. Jumping in on this one because the scenario above was my parents, but worse. My father used money to control my mom - literally gave her cash in an envelope every month and that was it. To this day, my mom doesn't know how much they have in their estate or what will happen to her when he dies or if he leaves her. She budgets based on cash in the envelope. For whatever warped reason, he was very supportive of his daughters' education and paid for all of it and I'm grateful. However, my parents' weird dynamic, which was partly my mom's fault, greatly affected my and my sister's life choices - we both work and do well. My brother married a woman with a good career.