Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eww. You're perpetuating the worst stereotypes about women being gold-diggers.
When I started dating my husband, he was a scruffy guy just out of grad school making $35K/year. He drove a crappy car that barely worked and survived on tacos from 24-hour taco stands. I saw his potential and fell in love with him. Fast forward 6 years and he's making $230K/year + stock.
You’re agreeing with PP. You saw his potential to make a lot of money and fell in love with him.
Pot meet kettle
When did I say that? You're reading into it and making assumptions. I saw his potential AS A PERSON. I care that he's making more because, at the time, he was on the brink of declaring bankruptcy and had gained 60 pounds from depression.
When I said "potential," I meant I saw in him the ability to craft a happier life for himself. One where he wasn't depressed, in poverty, and unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:No income requirement, particularly as we met midway through college. And based on our majors, it was clear that in our future my salary would always be significantly less than his (I actively pointed this out to him early on, it's a notoriously low paying career), so who was I to judge? I will concede, as have a couple of PPs, that overall employability and reliability was important to me. If DH had flaked out senior year, it would have been a different story. But if he had decided he wanted to be an elementary school teacher instead of an engineer, it would still have been fine.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t have a money requirement per se...
Here’s my story:
I was again single at 36. Went on Tinder. Met a guy who was also 36, lived in a share-house, and was “thinking of going back to school.” I lived alone in a condo I owned and had an established career as a lawyer. The guy and I also didn’t click, but I thought about what I wanted.
I said, I need to date an “adult.” I’m a grown up now and I think I’d be better suited to dating someone with his own apartment (didn’t care if he was renting) and has a career (fine with what the career was, even if relatively low-paid). I also decided the guy needed to have graduated from college.
I wrote these requirements on a piece of paper - college, own apartment, career. And I also wrote down non-smoker, not currently in a relationship (or “it’s some complicated situation”), not addicted to another harder than reality TV.
This helped me. I found my husband a few months later. I was operating before as a romantic. I should date anyone, you never know, blah blah blah...
I found my husband, because I decided to stop wasting time with long-shots (based on different lifestyles), and trying to date someone who was at a similar place in life, and who also was looking for a spouse.
So not money, per se...
Anonymous wrote:I hope you know that when they say "no" there is the unspoken proviso, "but you have to make more than I do".