Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why was it on her to pick the shoes, clothes, etc? Take the kid shopping for goodness sake!
I did this with my ex because she wanted specific things for our kids and I cared less about that kind of stuff. In the beginning if the child support wasn't enough for the kid's clothes, shoes, etc. I could take the kids shopping but she'd end up complaining that I got the wrongs kind of shoes, wrong fabric pants, etc. So she sent me a list of what they needed and I ordered it. I wouldn't give her more cash because she had a history of taking money meant for the kids and spending it on herself. It's how she ran up huge credit card bills when we were married, and one of the reasons for our divorce.
Anonymous wrote:My goodness, cut off contact with her. Pay the court ordered amount, her support can pay for those things. Not your problem.
You've given this sponge too much access into your lives. She'll either sink or swim, NOT your problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is DCUM so mean to second wives?? This woman already has child support and alimony. Of course it's OP's business. Her DH's salary is half hers, not the ex wife's.
+1. We don't pay the ex besides child support and alimony. That's what that money is for. We buy and do a ton for and with the kids when we have them, but that is the only money that goes directly the ex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I posted yesterday that the OP needed to just leave it alone, and I stand by that.
Yes, it is OP's business. Yes, it sucks to have no input. I don't disagree with that. I also think that sitting down with your husband and talking about a budget - generally - could prevent this issue.
Really, though, there is almost nothing that the OP can say in this situation that isn't going to make her seem pretty awful, at which point her husband is in a really terrible place between his bitchy ex-wife who blames him for her bad decisions and his bitchy new wife who blames him for caving to his bitchy ex-wife.
It matters how much money is being requested. The differential incomes also matters. My ex pays child support that we agreed on when we got divorced. If our daughter also needs something else expensive, he usually pays for that as well. Why? He makes 2x as much as I do. A $500 ballet class for me is saving money for several months. The same class, for him, barely registers as an expense.
Maybe his new wife is not happy that when it is time to register DD for ballet, I call him and ask if he will pay the bill. The thing is, his child support is supposed to cover her basic needs - shelter, food, clothing. Extracurricular expenses are not usually considered in the list of basic needs. If there is a disconnect between the OP, her husband, and her husband's ex about what the child needs, then that is a different conversation.
Lawyer here and that's actually not true in VA. If you read the reports and analysis from the child support guidelines review committee as well as case law the child support amount (including the contributions from both parents) is intended to cover everything except for daycare and medical bills.
Anonymous wrote:I posted yesterday that the OP needed to just leave it alone, and I stand by that.
Yes, it is OP's business. Yes, it sucks to have no input. I don't disagree with that. I also think that sitting down with your husband and talking about a budget - generally - could prevent this issue.
Really, though, there is almost nothing that the OP can say in this situation that isn't going to make her seem pretty awful, at which point her husband is in a really terrible place between his bitchy ex-wife who blames him for her bad decisions and his bitchy new wife who blames him for caving to his bitchy ex-wife.
It matters how much money is being requested. The differential incomes also matters. My ex pays child support that we agreed on when we got divorced. If our daughter also needs something else expensive, he usually pays for that as well. Why? He makes 2x as much as I do. A $500 ballet class for me is saving money for several months. The same class, for him, barely registers as an expense.
Maybe his new wife is not happy that when it is time to register DD for ballet, I call him and ask if he will pay the bill. The thing is, his child support is supposed to cover her basic needs - shelter, food, clothing. Extracurricular expenses are not usually considered in the list of basic needs. If there is a disconnect between the OP, her husband, and her husband's ex about what the child needs, then that is a different conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why was it on her to pick the shoes, clothes, etc? Take the kid shopping for goodness sake!
Right! The ex has to tell you what size your husband's child wears? There are multiple problems here.
Anonymous wrote:Why is DCUM so mean to second wives?? This woman already has child support and alimony. Of course it's OP's business. Her DH's salary is half hers, not the ex wife's.