Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I 10x my wife’s income, I’m also very greedy but in 1 million years I would never ever consider pitching something like this, it would completely devalue my wife’s position in our relationship- if you want to look at it as a business our business was set up to produce love not profit.
I didn’t marry her to increase the earnings of an organization, I married her because I loved her. I’m picturing 10 years into our marriage I sit her down for a performance review where I spring a postnup on her because her sales have plateaued….uhh, yeah…I would fully expect to be stabbed in my sleep.
I’m sure this money thing is just the tip of the iceberg and your husband suffers all sorts of slights, jabs and insults from you, your priorities are insane.
Have you ever had a neuropsych evaluation?
Gross op!
I agree with you OP needs a neuropsych evaluation. She sounds like she’s on the spectrum. She shouldn’t have married or had kids, clearly.
Anonymous wrote:I 10x my wife’s income, I’m also very greedy but in 1 million years I would never ever consider pitching something like this, it would completely devalue my wife’s position in our relationship- if you want to look at it as a business our business was set up to produce love not profit.
I didn’t marry her to increase the earnings of an organization, I married her because I loved her. I’m picturing 10 years into our marriage I sit her down for a performance review where I spring a postnup on her because her sales have plateaued….uhh, yeah…I would fully expect to be stabbed in my sleep.
I’m sure this money thing is just the tip of the iceberg and your husband suffers all sorts of slights, jabs and insults from you, your priorities are insane.
Have you ever had a neuropsych evaluation?
Gross op!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never do this either. It’s hard to imagine that money is so important to you. It’s not like he’s a deadbeat and not contributing.
It’s very simple - I am going to have to work many years longer than I want to at a job I don’t love to compensate for his prioritizing his own interests over income in order to pay for college and retire comfortably. If either of us decides to leave the marriage, I don’t feel he should get half of the wealth I’ve built making sacrifices he has not made.
You must be a troll. Or maybe you're actually a man who switched around the genders in your story? This sounds like the typical BS you get from men who suddenly make more money and want to screw over their wife.
Anonymous wrote:I 10x my wife’s income, I’m also very greedy but in 1 million years I would never ever consider pitching something like this, it would completely devalue my wife’s position in our relationship- if you want to look at it as a business our business was set up to produce love not profit.
I didn’t marry her to increase the earnings of an organization, I married her because I loved her. I’m picturing 10 years into our marriage I sit her down for a performance review where I spring a postnup on her because her sales have plateaued….uhh, yeah…I would fully expect to be stabbed in my sleep.
I’m sure this money thing is just the tip of the iceberg and your husband suffers all sorts of slights, jabs and insults from you, your priorities are insane.
Have you ever had a neuropsych evaluation?
Gross op!
Anonymous wrote:This will not hold up in court.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I call troll. If he's a PhD scientist then he's making at least $120k and so your making $360k. If you think that's insufficient for college, living expenses and retirement then why are you pregnant with a 2nd child?
Seriously. What's wrong with being a scientist??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never do this either. It’s hard to imagine that money is so important to you. It’s not like he’s a deadbeat and not contributing.
It’s very simple - I am going to have to work many years longer than I want to at a job I don’t love to compensate for his prioritizing his own interests over income in order to pay for college and retire comfortably. If either of us decides to leave the marriage, I don’t feel he should get half of the wealth I’ve built making sacrifices he has not made.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never do this either. It’s hard to imagine that money is so important to you. It’s not like he’s a deadbeat and not contributing.
It’s very simple - I am going to have to work many years longer than I want to at a job I don’t love to compensate for his prioritizing his own interests over income in order to pay for college and retire comfortably. If either of us decides to leave the marriage, I don’t feel he should get half of the wealth I’ve built making sacrifices he has not made.
Anonymous wrote:I call troll. If he's a PhD scientist then he's making at least $120k and so your making $360k. If you think that's insufficient for college, living expenses and retirement then why are you pregnant with a 2nd child?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Married 9 years. I’m the wife, and and now making 3X DH’s salary. He is not money motivated (scientist), and I feel alone in my by goals to work hard to build wealth.
I would like to match his salary in a joint account for our living expenses and keep the rest for myself. He says he is not opposed to this. Has anyone ever done anything like this? Is it very unreasonable of me to feel this way?
I’m hoping this can assuage my resentment. If I could go back I would marry someone with better aligned values, but I can’t go back in time. Marriage is otherwise decent.
We have a child with another on the way so I don’t want to frivolously divorce.
Every successful marriage I see, they have joint finances. Its "our money", not "my money" or "your money", no matter if both earn equally or theirs is a disparity. If you are into money, manage it yourself but no need to divide it. There is more to life than money.