Anonymous wrote:What stops you from opening the bank account and moving money to your child’s account?
What stops you booking a family vacation?
He says you’re incompatible? Ok cool. That’s a nice idea honey you should think about that. Then get on the plane and go on the trip.
Because here’s the thing. If he wants to divorce he’ll do so, whether or not you’ve made yourself miserable and tried to make him a better spouse first. So live your life— keep your kids account funded (and take screenshots, judges won’t like to see him draining a 529) go on the trips you want and be impervious to his comments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Threatening divorce is a di$% move and frankly it’s just a bluff you should call him on it. Go to couples therapy. Any therapist will tell him to knock it off. If he refuses couples therapy I would separate.
+1. Repeated threats of divorce to get his way is abusive and controlling. I think you should insist on couples therapy or separate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you think he's cheating or wants to cheat and is setting this up?
He is definitely cheating.
Anonymous wrote:Threatening divorce is a di$% move and frankly it’s just a bluff you should call him on it. Go to couples therapy. Any therapist will tell him to knock it off. If he refuses couples therapy I would separate.
Anonymous wrote:Do you think he's cheating or wants to cheat and is setting this up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Given he changed there must have been something that wasn’t working for him before. So now he is taking a hard line. Somehow he didn’t feel the previous discussions were fruitful in reaching fair compromise so he is no longer willing to engage in something he didn’t think was effective. I don’t know your dynamic or what led to the change but it’s worth going back a bit and seeing what wasn’t working for him and what led to this rigid stance he has now.
I'll try to dig in more - any recs for how I should frame this to not come out as offensive and fend off defensiveness?
For now, he just says he is a different person and he wants to do what he wants and not what I want and he feels really tempted to just have an easy life where he just does only what he wants.
That sounds like he has checked out of the marriage entirely. I think you need to find out if he actually wants to be married or not. I doubt this is the only issue.
Anonymous wrote:Is he from a patriarchal culture? This does not sound WASPy.
Anonymous wrote:if you make your own money- If i were you i wouldnt file for divorce right off the bat. i'd get a new job and apartment in a new place, quietly and sneakily furnish it and one day just drive there. Live your life, see what his reaction is. If he calls you- just clamly say, you kept on saying i can leave. so i left, we are incompatible. see what happens next.
Children are a LOT of work- he might not want custody. if, as i suspect, he will move his parents in to raise the kid if he opts for custodial time, he'll have even less autonomy than he does now. I know a jerk who left his wife with 4 kids b/c he just wasnt feeling it (in a super conservative Indian family0- said he never wanted an arranged marriage) and she has kids 100%, started working as a teacher, has all the community support and is thriving. Dont be afraid. you dont have to live like this. honestly, living alone is soooo much better than living with an annoying husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, there recently was a post on this forum from a woman whose husband always threatened divorce, repeatedly, every time they disagreed. Maybe look that post up here. Repeated threats of divorce are actually considered an abusive tactic, according to mental health and domestic abuse experts. ONE instance of bringing up divorce isn't necessarily a controlling/abusive act, but repeated threats to divorce definitley are controlling (he knows it instills fear in you, and you don't want to divorce, so he'll get his way = controlling you).
I'd absolutely start (1) Putting away money he cannot access and doesn't know about (do not use any bank he also uses, or which you use jointly). You need money he cannot clear out suddenly if he decides to exit. Yes, it can and does happen. (2) Gathering financial and legal documents so you have records of his income, your family finances, etc. You may need them later. (3) Looking into how you can earn, find or otherwise access money he can't touch. (4) Talking to your own therapist. Solo therapy, not couples therapy. If you feel you need to hide it from him, find a way to hide it. I suspect he would be horrible to you if he knows you're talking to an "outsider" about him. (5) Talking to lawyers to see whether it's advisable to divorce sooner, later, financially, etc. That is not the same as me saying "Divorce!" but you need to know if it's doable.
Do not fall for posts here blithely saying he probably won't want any custody, or much, if you divorce. He might decide he does want it, and you have to weigh that. I hate when people on DCUM claim "Oh, he won't want custody, kids are too much work" to posts like yours. One never knows what a spouse might do.
Question: how can you hide an account like this? You presumably do taxes together... so do you just have to open a really crummy account with no benefits/interest?
Hoping a woman who has done this will chime in with her specific advice. I haven't had to do this but it's been advised on DCUM many times over the years--to get an account the spouse cannot touch and preferably doesnt' know exists. The tax question is a good one, definitely. I do know that with joint accounts, one spouse can clear the account out without the other spouse's OK, most of the time, so that's what women looking for an exit want to avoid--finding out they have access to little or no ready money for immediate use.
Anyone out there who can advise?