Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could separate your finances or set rules together.
I wouldn't divorce over this.
His people-pleasing is a double edged sword and probably one of the things that really attracted you to him. It's got to benefit you often in other contexts. This is the trade off.
This. Sounds like he’s a really nice guy. I’d hang in to him. This is a problem that can be worked out.
He doesn’t sound like a nice guy. Nice guys care about their families. This guy cares about appearances and looking good to other people. He doesn’t care if his wife and child pay the price as long as he looks good to the outside world.
Not a nice guy at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could separate your finances or set rules together.
I wouldn't divorce over this.
His people-pleasing is a double edged sword and probably one of the things that really attracted you to him. It's got to benefit you often in other contexts. This is the trade off.
This. Sounds like he’s a really nice guy. I’d hang in to him. This is a problem that can be worked out.
Anonymous wrote:"Honey, I love what a generous person you are, and how you take action in projects. These are great qualities I appreciate about you. There's something I need your help with. I feel really stressed about the amount of money you spent on our account. I know you expect some reimbursement, but I'm not comfortable with how that goes. Going forward, in the future, can you talk to me before you spend more than (whatever you think is reasonable) from our account for other people/projects, even if you expect to be reimbursed?"
Anonymous wrote:It may be helping his career in ways you don't understand
Anonymous wrote:You're ready to leave your husband over being essentially like a generous person?
Is this dramatically and negatively impacting the family finances?
Yes, that's your choice. If I were OP's husband, it wouldn't make me sick because it would be my choice to do it. But what makes me feel sick is that OP has no control over something that her husband chooses to do. I've been in a similar situation where money was really short and dh chose to be magnanimous without asking me about it first. I'm the one who had to deal with the shortfall that he was so happy to add to - it didn't keep him awake at night. Just me.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, that's a tough one. I get a sick feeling in my stomach just reading about this. I don't know how you solve this problem. Good luck!
Why do you get sick?
Dealing with cheap ass people at work or charity events just gets old. I have the means and ability to deal with the mundane petty stuff so I take care of it.
Not going waste emotional or intellectual capital arguing over it. Also the amount of money I make in an hour isn’t going to justify me chasing people down for incremental amounts of money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, that's a tough one. I get a sick feeling in my stomach just reading about this. I don't know how you solve this problem. Good luck!
Why do you get sick?
Dealing with cheap ass people at work or charity events just gets old. I have the means and ability to deal with the mundane petty stuff so I take care of it.
Not going waste emotional or intellectual capital arguing over it. Also the amount of money I make in an hour isn’t going to justify me chasing people down for incremental amounts of money.
Anonymous wrote:OP, that's a tough one. I get a sick feeling in my stomach just reading about this. I don't know how you solve this problem. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:You could separate your finances or set rules together.
I wouldn't divorce over this.
His people-pleasing is a double edged sword and probably one of the things that really attracted you to him. It's got to benefit you often in other contexts. This is the trade off.