Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised this is even an issue. If someone is concerned about a potential partner having student loan debt, then start dating waitresses, hairdressers, and construction workers. However, you could be like my relative who dated a waitress who then decided she wanted to advance in life and he paid for her to attend college and she got a job working in a lab.
Student loan debt isn’t like credit card debit or a car loan for a G Wagon. It’s an investment in yourself and future earning potential.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of girls are still being raised to be women that think it’s a man’s job to pay for everything so they do t really care about their debt. Once they find a man, they make it his problem.
Even on this board that is more liberal than some, posts on these topics have more than 50% of responses saying he needs to pay and it is very rare to see any post ever ascribe any financial responsibility to women.
Unless you want to take on their debt, move on.
This is just stupid. I had student loan debt when I got married (and so did my husband). it's not credit card debt. My parents didn't pay for college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 28 and I am ready to settled down. I went on dates with 2 different women and they both have very high student loans debt. One is 30 and the other 26. I am not going to generalize based on a sample of 2, but is this common? They both went to graduate school. I just have a bachelor's degree in math and work as an actuary.
I didn't go to graduate school precisely for this reason because I wanted to get on the homeownership and retirement savings ladder quicker. So I went to a an average state college and came out with only $10k in student loans which I paid off my first year of working.
How do people manage this conversation if they come across someone they like but are worried about their student loans?
Just so I'm understanding this correctly... You discussed student loan debt on a first date?
Right?! But OP is an actuary, so probaby very boring. I have a JD that my parents paid for. If you asked me if I had student loans on the first date, I would have not agreed to a second date. Dating is inhertently a risk, OP. You should know that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 28 and I am ready to settled down. I went on dates with 2 different women and they both have very high student loans debt. One is 30 and the other 26. I am not going to generalize based on a sample of 2, but is this common? They both went to graduate school. I just have a bachelor's degree in math and work as an actuary.
I didn't go to graduate school precisely for this reason because I wanted to get on the homeownership and retirement savings ladder quicker. So I went to a an average state college and came out with only $10k in student loans which I paid off my first year of working.
How do people manage this conversation if they come across someone they like but are worried about their student loans?
Just so I'm understanding this correctly... You discussed student loan debt on a first date?
Anonymous wrote:A lot of girls are still being raised to be women that think it’s a man’s job to pay for everything so they do t really care about their debt. Once they find a man, they make it his problem.
Even on this board that is more liberal than some, posts on these topics have more than 50% of responses saying he needs to pay and it is very rare to see any post ever ascribe any financial responsibility to women.
Unless you want to take on their debt, move on.
Anonymous wrote:Look for girls who are good at math. They tend to understand how to manage money better. Not liberal arts in other words.
Anonymous wrote:I am 28 and I am ready to settled down. I went on dates with 2 different women and they both have very high student loans debt. One is 30 and the other 26. I am not going to generalize based on a sample of 2, but is this common? They both went to graduate school. I just have a bachelor's degree in math and work as an actuary.
I didn't go to graduate school precisely for this reason because I wanted to get on the homeownership and retirement savings ladder quicker. So I went to a an average state college and came out with only $10k in student loans which I paid off my first year of working.
How do people manage this conversation if they come across someone they like but are worried about their student loans?