[b]Anonymous wrote:This is crazy to me. I work from home and my husband makes more then 3 times my salary but we’re still a team. As in, he works more so I do school pick up, pack lunches, make sure our bills get paid, make dinner for the kids. and when he’s not working he picks up the house work too. Marriage is supppsed to be a partnership and my husband always tells me how grateful he is for all the things I do. Just because your husband gets paid more doesn’t mean he’s more deserving of that money. You guys are partners. I could never be disrespected in this way.
I don’t understand women like you. I’d never sign up to have separate bank accounts and live like I’m a child with an allowance. It’s your fault for agreeing to this to begin with. Best of luck in turning things around
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Joint credit card.
I am dependent on my husband's visa and not allowed to work (visa work prohibitions vary, this one is strict). It took me years to persuade my husband that it was only fair to have a joint credit card account.
It's mind-boggling that men still think keeping their wives under tight financial control is OK. Not what I initially signed up for!
Are you both Indian?
Why do you ask? Is this typical of Indian men? Ugh
DP here. DH and I are both Indians. I think my DH is very much like the typical Indian male in our social class/circle both in the US and in India. He always wanted to be the provider and thus never let me contribute any of my earnings. All my money and assets remain in my name, though everything he has earned is jointly in our name. Maybe it is not equal, but I can live with this kind of inequality.
![]()
Really?
Anonymous wrote:I make about the same as my DH and I still can't buy a china cabinet without discussing with him. OP, stop acting like a child stomping around an ATM machine. You are partners, family financial goals should be joint. Who is going to pay for your child's tuition? "Husband will figure it out somehow"? Well, he is figuring it out - but not being a big spender. You need to stop me vs him mentality, it's family, you're not a separate entity that should be free to spend whatever whenever.
Anonymous wrote:And this is not like the typical Indian male in the US. Most have evolved.
Anonymous wrote:Joint credit card.
I am dependent on my husband's visa and not allowed to work (visa work prohibitions vary, this one is strict). It took me years to persuade my husband that it was only fair to have a joint credit card account.
It's mind-boggling that men still think keeping their wives under tight financial control is OK. Not what I initially signed up for!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Joint credit card.
I am dependent on my husband's visa and not allowed to work (visa work prohibitions vary, this one is strict). It took me years to persuade my husband that it was only fair to have a joint credit card account.
It's mind-boggling that men still think keeping their wives under tight financial control is OK. Not what I initially signed up for!
Are you both Indian?
Why do you ask? Is this typical of Indian men? Ugh
DP here. DH and I are both Indians. I think my DH is very much like the typical Indian male in our social class/circle both in the US and in India. He always wanted to be the provider and thus never let me contribute any of my earnings. All my money and assets remain in my name, though everything he has earned is jointly in our name. Maybe it is not equal, but I can live with this kind of inequality.
![]()