Anonymous wrote:These are not huge items but they add up. When I raise the topic, dh gets very defensive and insists these are ‘necessities’ and important for his ‘health’. It is really getting to me as I’m shouldering all the major expenses, and I don’t buy these things for myself. Since being laid off, dh is ‘consulting’ but makes very little.
We have one dc left at home and he now follows dh’s spending patterns.
Examples:
Almost daily smoothies that are $12+
Starbucks
Organic everything - milk, cream, meat, fruit.
Gym membership at pricey gym
Take out - and always with a large drink or two that they end up tossing
New clothing items that they deem ‘necessary’ - eg, new pricey athletic shoes once a season, new boots, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are not huge items but they add up. When I raise the topic, dh gets very defensive and insists these are ‘necessities’ and important for his ‘health’. It is really getting to me as I’m shouldering all the major expenses, and I don’t buy these things for myself. Since being laid off, dh is ‘consulting’ but makes very little.
We have one dc left at home and he now follows dh’s spending patterns.
Examples:
Almost daily smoothies that are $12+
Starbucks
Organic everything - milk, cream, meat, fruit.
Gym membership at pricey gym
Take out - and always with a large drink or two that they end up tossing
New clothing items that they deem ‘necessary’ - eg, new pricey athletic shoes once a season, new boots, etc.
How much did he earn when he was working vs how much you earn? Did you take time off when kids were small.
In some ways 50s is men’s “SAHD” period because they become unemployable
Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With the use of debit and credit cards, it is very easy to see where money is going. Do you have a budget? If not, you both need to do a deep dive on where your money is going. The numbers don’t lie.
We don’t share credit cards or a bank account
Yeah that’s weird. You understand it’s still his money too in the eyes of the law? And his debt is your debt?
We have a prenup so no, that’s not exactly how it works.
And I don’t care if you think it’s weird.
Well a prenup is even weirder unless one of you comes from family money. And then yeah worrying about smoothies is nonsense too
Make it make sense
Oh you’re make it make sense poster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are not huge items but they add up. When I raise the topic, dh gets very defensive and insists these are ‘necessities’ and important for his ‘health’. It is really getting to me as I’m shouldering all the major expenses, and I don’t buy these things for myself. Since being laid off, dh is ‘consulting’ but makes very little.
We have one dc left at home and he now follows dh’s spending patterns.
Examples:
Almost daily smoothies that are $12+
Starbucks
Organic everything - milk, cream, meat, fruit.
Gym membership at pricey gym
Take out - and always with a large drink or two that they end up tossing
New clothing items that they deem ‘necessary’ - eg, new pricey athletic shoes once a season, new boots, etc.
Read “all your worth”. This type of purchases are annoying but are not changing the trajectory of your financial life.
You are the “avacado toast is why you can’t afford a house” camp right now. It’s noise and doesn’t really change anything.
Only exception would be what counts as “pricey” gym — is it close to $1000 /month like a car payment? I know that is one place it can get extreme.
I need new shoes every 6 months and I don’t exercise all the time — your DH might be with all his free time.
Totally disagree. All of those things easily count to 1k a month. 12k a year is like why you can’t afford a home. It’s shocking actually how much the little things add up.
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With the use of debit and credit cards, it is very easy to see where money is going. Do you have a budget? If not, you both need to do a deep dive on where your money is going. The numbers don’t lie.
We don’t share credit cards or a bank account
Yeah that’s weird. You understand it’s still his money too in the eyes of the law? And his debt is your debt?
We have a prenup so no, that’s not exactly how it works.
And I don’t care if you think it’s weird.
Well a prenup is even weirder unless one of you comes from family money. And then yeah worrying about smoothies is nonsense too
Make it make sense
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are not huge items but they add up. When I raise the topic, dh gets very defensive and insists these are ‘necessities’ and important for his ‘health’. It is really getting to me as I’m shouldering all the major expenses, and I don’t buy these things for myself. Since being laid off, dh is ‘consulting’ but makes very little.
We have one dc left at home and he now follows dh’s spending patterns.
Examples:
Almost daily smoothies that are $12+
Starbucks
Organic everything - milk, cream, meat, fruit.
Gym membership at pricey gym
Take out - and always with a large drink or two that they end up tossing
New clothing items that they deem ‘necessary’ - eg, new pricey athletic shoes once a season, new boots, etc.
Read “all your worth”. This type of purchases are annoying but are not changing the trajectory of your financial life.
You are the “avacado toast is why you can’t afford a house” camp right now. It’s noise and doesn’t really change anything.
Only exception would be what counts as “pricey” gym — is it close to $1000 /month like a car payment? I know that is one place it can get extreme.
I need new shoes every 6 months and I don’t exercise all the time — your DH might be with all his free time.
Totally disagree. All of those things easily count to 1k a month. 12k a year is like why you can’t afford a home. It’s shocking actually how much the little things add up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With the use of debit and credit cards, it is very easy to see where money is going. Do you have a budget? If not, you both need to do a deep dive on where your money is going. The numbers don’t lie.
We don’t share credit cards or a bank account
Yeah that’s weird. You understand it’s still his money too in the eyes of the law? And his debt is your debt?
We have a prenup so no, that’s not exactly how it works.
And I don’t care if you think it’s weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With the use of debit and credit cards, it is very easy to see where money is going. Do you have a budget? If not, you both need to do a deep dive on where your money is going. The numbers don’t lie.
We don’t share credit cards or a bank account
Yeah that’s weird. You understand it’s still his money too in the eyes of the law? And his debt is your debt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are not huge items but they add up. When I raise the topic, dh gets very defensive and insists these are ‘necessities’ and important for his ‘health’. It is really getting to me as I’m shouldering all the major expenses, and I don’t buy these things for myself. Since being laid off, dh is ‘consulting’ but makes very little.
We have one dc left at home and he now follows dh’s spending patterns.
Examples:
Almost daily smoothies that are $12+
Starbucks
Organic everything - milk, cream, meat, fruit.
Gym membership at pricey gym
Take out - and always with a large drink or two that they end up tossing
New clothing items that they deem ‘necessary’ - eg, new pricey athletic shoes once a season, new boots, etc.
Read “all your worth”. This type of purchases are annoying but are not changing the trajectory of your financial life.
You are the “avacado toast is why you can’t afford a house” camp right now. It’s noise and doesn’t really change anything.
Only exception would be what counts as “pricey” gym — is it close to $1000 /month like a car payment? I know that is one place it can get extreme.
I need new shoes every 6 months and I don’t exercise all the time — your DH might be with all his free time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With the use of debit and credit cards, it is very easy to see where money is going. Do you have a budget? If not, you both need to do a deep dive on where your money is going. The numbers don’t lie.
We don’t share credit cards or a bank account
Anonymous wrote:These are not huge items but they add up. When I raise the topic, dh gets very defensive and insists these are ‘necessities’ and important for his ‘health’. It is really getting to me as I’m shouldering all the major expenses, and I don’t buy these things for myself. Since being laid off, dh is ‘consulting’ but makes very little.
We have one dc left at home and he now follows dh’s spending patterns.
Examples:
Almost daily smoothies that are $12+
Starbucks
Organic everything - milk, cream, meat, fruit.
Gym membership at pricey gym
Take out - and always with a large drink or two that they end up tossing
New clothing items that they deem ‘necessary’ - eg, new pricey athletic shoes once a season, new boots, etc.
Anonymous wrote:These are not huge items but they add up. When I raise the topic, dh gets very defensive and insists these are ‘necessities’ and important for his ‘health’. It is really getting to me as I’m shouldering all the major expenses, and I don’t buy these things for myself. Since being laid off, dh is ‘consulting’ but makes very little.
We have one dc left at home and he now follows dh’s spending patterns.
Examples:
Almost daily smoothies that are $12+
Starbucks
Organic everything - milk, cream, meat, fruit.
Gym membership at pricey gym
Take out - and always with a large drink or two that they end up tossing
New clothing items that they deem ‘necessary’ - eg, new pricey athletic shoes once a season, new boots, etc.