Anonymous wrote:OP here: am I crazy or there are other women with such logics as well? I just don't see how it would be easier for me if I divorce and live my modest life, when the jerk would bring his whore in the house where I bought our baby. And my son would have to spend 50% with the whore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- if she’s younger beware of the second family she will most likely want to start to seal her position. Protect your kid’s inheritance. OW sounds like an intense gold-digger. She most likely is using his sorry ass and will cheat on him in the future and take him for all he’s worth.
Luckily she's older, she is 51. But stretching the divorce for couple more years would probably seal the possibility of any donor kids etc.
Does she have kids of her own??? Will he be paying for their college??
Anonymous wrote:^ if you are on the deed, he cannot tell you to vacate the premises. Wtf?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- if she’s younger beware of the second family she will most likely want to start to seal her position. Protect your kid’s inheritance. OW sounds like an intense gold-digger. She most likely is using his sorry ass and will cheat on him in the future and take him for all he’s worth.
Luckily she's older, she is 51. But stretching the divorce for couple more years would probably seal the possibility of any donor kids etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would file for divorce and ask for 1/2 the family business or life long alimony, child support and 1/2 of all real-estate and assets. Don't wait till you find a job. You own half that business. You worked in that business so that was your job.
And, make a custody schedule where he is responsible 50% of the time. Stop playing nice.
What are you waiting for?
Hahahahahahahahah life long alimony hahahahaha please stop
OP here: I am waiting to finish my courses to sit for CPA and take as many exams as I can prior divorce actions, to upper my resume. I am not able to find a job at the moment at all! And I was making 100k 10 years ago.
My lawyer and several others told me I would not get life long alimony in DC as 1) I am young 2) I am educated 3) I will be getting assets in the divorce 4)my son is 15.
I don’t want to move out from my NWDC mansion until I get a job. I won’t be even asking for alimony - 50k/year for 2 years won’t make me a big difference and I will be under higher stress when living alone.
CPA here. First and foremost, listen to your attorney. But with respect to job prospects, I am not sure getting your license will help at this point in your career. That said, if you continue to pursue that option, you could theoretically crank it out in 1.5 years (assuming you only need to fulfill your 24 credit hours in accounting). I did it while working full time with two young children...it wasn't pleasant but it is doable if you make it your single focus. Just thought it might be helpful to put some sort timeframe around when you can expect to move on to the next stage.
I only need 13.5 credits, as I already have prior finance related MS degree. I will finish my extra credits courses by the end of the summer and can take at least 1 CPA Exam in parallel. I do hope that pursuing a designation should help, at least somewhat. Of course I continue applying for jobs, but the market is just terrible!
Got it. My suggestion would be to take FAR first - it's the hardest for most people, and it is nice to work your way backwards from the hardest to the easiest (because by the time you get to the last one you will be OVER IT and summoning the strength to study will not be easy). Depending on your skillset you might want to consider other, easier certifications as well - like Certified Internal Auditor, Fraud Examiner and I believe there are some COSO 'certifications' as well. Best of luck!
Anonymous wrote:OP- if she’s younger beware of the second family she will most likely want to start to seal her position. Protect your kid’s inheritance. OW sounds like an intense gold-digger. She most likely is using his sorry ass and will cheat on him in the future and take him for all he’s worth.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, that’s right. My kids are older like your son so the uprooting thing didn’t bother me as much, I was willing to leave the house with my kids but this is the arrangement we worked out. I know it’s tough, and I’m sorry. I just needed him away from me ASAP, I borderline hate him. He also moved into our basement prior to leaving but even with that I was struggling. I worry about him introducing my kids to the other women too. I hate her. But I mostly have let it go, my kids are older and I have zero control over it. Good luck to you.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My ex left over the summer. My 2 kids live with me and I make 85k. I don’t get anything from him except he pays the mortgage on the house me and the kids live in. He cheated on me for years and is still with the woman. My peace of mind with him being out of this house is worth more than any amount of money.
But you stayed in your house for which he pays mortgage, right? Your kids were not uprooted with him moving out? My life will have to change, and my son would be splitting time and possibly living in his birthplace home with his whore
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would file for divorce and ask for 1/2 the family business or life long alimony, child support and 1/2 of all real-estate and assets. Don't wait till you find a job. You own half that business. You worked in that business so that was your job.
And, make a custody schedule where he is responsible 50% of the time. Stop playing nice.
What are you waiting for?
Hahahahahahahahah life long alimony hahahahaha please stop
OP here: I am waiting to finish my courses to sit for CPA and take as many exams as I can prior divorce actions, to upper my resume. I am not able to find a job at the moment at all! And I was making 100k 10 years ago.
My lawyer and several others told me I would not get life long alimony in DC as 1) I am young 2) I am educated 3) I will be getting assets in the divorce 4)my son is 15.
I don’t want to move out from my NWDC mansion until I get a job. I won’t be even asking for alimony - 50k/year for 2 years won’t make me a big difference and I will be under higher stress when living alone.
CPA here. First and foremost, listen to your attorney. But with respect to job prospects, I am not sure getting your license will help at this point in your career. That said, if you continue to pursue that option, you could theoretically crank it out in 1.5 years (assuming you only need to fulfill your 24 credit hours in accounting). I did it while working full time with two young children...it wasn't pleasant but it is doable if you make it your single focus. Just thought it might be helpful to put some sort timeframe around when you can expect to move on to the next stage.
I only need 13.5 credits, as I already have prior finance related MS degree. I will finish my extra credits courses by the end of the summer and can take at least 1 CPA Exam in parallel. I do hope that pursuing a designation should help, at least somewhat. Of course I continue applying for jobs, but the market is just terrible!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would file for divorce and ask for 1/2 the family business or life long alimony, child support and 1/2 of all real-estate and assets. Don't wait till you find a job. You own half that business. You worked in that business so that was your job.
And, make a custody schedule where he is responsible 50% of the time. Stop playing nice.
What are you waiting for?
Hahahahahahahahah life long alimony hahahahaha please stop
OP here: I am waiting to finish my courses to sit for CPA and take as many exams as I can prior divorce actions, to upper my resume. I am not able to find a job at the moment at all! And I was making 100k 10 years ago.
My lawyer and several others told me I would not get life long alimony in DC as 1) I am young 2) I am educated 3) I will be getting assets in the divorce 4)my son is 15.
I don’t want to move out from my NWDC mansion until I get a job. I won’t be even asking for alimony - 50k/year for 2 years won’t make me a big difference and I will be under higher stress when living alone.
CPA here. First and foremost, listen to your attorney. But with respect to job prospects, I am not sure getting your license will help at this point in your career. That said, if you continue to pursue that option, you could theoretically crank it out in 1.5 years (assuming you only need to fulfill your 24 credit hours in accounting). I did it while working full time with two young children...it wasn't pleasant but it is doable if you make it your single focus. Just thought it might be helpful to put some sort timeframe around when you can expect to move on to the next stage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would file for divorce and ask for 1/2 the family business or life long alimony, child support and 1/2 of all real-estate and assets. Don't wait till you find a job. You own half that business. You worked in that business so that was your job.
And, make a custody schedule where he is responsible 50% of the time. Stop playing nice.
What are you waiting for?
Hahahahahahahahah life long alimony hahahahaha please stop
OP here: I am waiting to finish my courses to sit for CPA and take as many exams as I can prior divorce actions, to upper my resume. I am not able to find a job at the moment at all! And I was making 100k 10 years ago.
My lawyer and several others told me I would not get life long alimony in DC as 1) I am young 2) I am educated 3) I will be getting assets in the divorce 4)my son is 15.
I don’t want to move out from my NWDC mansion until I get a job. I won’t be even asking for alimony - 50k/year for 2 years won’t make me a big difference and I will be under higher stress when living alone.
Yes, that’s right. My kids are older like your son so the uprooting thing didn’t bother me as much, I was willing to leave the house with my kids but this is the arrangement we worked out. I know it’s tough, and I’m sorry. I just needed him away from me ASAP, I borderline hate him. He also moved into our basement prior to leaving but even with that I was struggling. I worry about him introducing my kids to the other women too. I hate her. But I mostly have let it go, my kids are older and I have zero control over it. Good luck to you.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My ex left over the summer. My 2 kids live with me and I make 85k. I don’t get anything from him except he pays the mortgage on the house me and the kids live in. He cheated on me for years and is still with the woman. My peace of mind with him being out of this house is worth more than any amount of money.
But you stayed in your house for which he pays mortgage, right? Your kids were not uprooted with him moving out? My life will have to change, and my son would be splitting time and possibly living in his birthplace home with his whore