Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he was rich, hot, and a great dad and spouse..than yeah, I might be drooling a bit!
Me too! But that combo is SO EXTREMELY RARE. Normally Big Law/C level etc = Big Ego and marital problems. I know too many women who stay married to cheating husbands for financial security. I'm so happy I have (and earn) my own money. Yes, my husband is rich... so am I. We are equals as is our power balance in the relationship. Have at me DCUM....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be happy for your own advantages in life and the things you enjoy about your spouse. Sure, I wish my spouse earned more but he probably wishes I looked like a Victoria’s Secret model (I don’t.)
Also, my dad is a retired big law partner and the grueling number of hours he worked put an enormous strain on my parents marriage. Though we had a nice life and a loving home, it was a sad relationship dynamic to be around growing up, and my dad missed a lot of his kids milestones working at a job he loathed.
Haha, you don’t care if your spouse makes much because YOU come from a rich family. How can you miss that? I’ll bet you had DP help, fully funded education, and don’t have to worry about paying for your parents elder care?
DP but I am much more envious of people who come from wealthy families than I am of women who marry rich guys. Graduating from school without debt is such a gift. Plus wealthy families can also often help with down payments, or they pay for nice travel, or they'll pay for your kids childcare. Hell, I'm jealous of people who have parents who provide free childcare (and are young and interested in doing so).
I'd rather have a wealthy and supportive family than a high earning spouse. With a wealthy family, you have support and protection even if you never marry at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all work hard but I notice that marrying the right guy really gives a woman a huge leg up. Most of us are working in jobs that pay us anywhere from 80k - 150k and then one of us marries a guy in Big Law or IB and her life is totally different.
Every time this happens, I feel a pang. Like, she jumped the line simply because a rich guy wanted to marry her?
How do I get over the envy and jealousy?
It's really sad that you and other women truly feel this way about your lives. You should thank uber hypocrite Sheryl Sandberg for this---lean in by dating guys with restraining orders and who run sexual harassments factories for companies as long as their network is 9 or 10 digits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I married a fund manager and he's in good shape and does not really have any of the issues people are complaining about. I guess he works a lot, but mostly from home. I work a lot, too. He does have extremely high expectations, and I feel them as his wife, and our kids definitely feel them, so that's something to consider if you'd prefer to coast through life a bit. OP, if you aren't married yet and you know this matters to you, then limit your dating pool.
Curious what his expectations are? Like, he wants you to be thin, groomed, house always neat and kids never cranky?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all work hard but I notice that marrying the right guy really gives a woman a huge leg up. Most of us are working in jobs that pay us anywhere from 80k - 150k and then one of us marries a guy in Big Law or IB and her life is totally different.
Every time this happens, I feel a pang. Like, she jumped the line simply because a rich guy wanted to marry her?
How do I get over the envy and jealousy?
It's really sad that you and other women truly feel this way about your lives. You should thank uber hypocrite Sheryl Sandberg for this---lean in by dating guys with restraining orders and who run sexual harassments factories for companies as long as their network is 9 or 10 digits.
Anonymous wrote:We all work hard but I notice that marrying the right guy really gives a woman a huge leg up. Most of us are working in jobs that pay us anywhere from 80k - 150k and then one of us marries a guy in Big Law or IB and her life is totally different.
Every time this happens, I feel a pang. Like, she jumped the line simply because a rich guy wanted to marry her?
How do I get over the envy and jealousy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I married a fund manager and he's in good shape and does not really have any of the issues people are complaining about. I guess he works a lot, but mostly from home. I work a lot, too. He does have extremely high expectations, and I feel them as his wife, and our kids definitely feel them, so that's something to consider if you'd prefer to coast through life a bit. OP, if you aren't married yet and you know this matters to you, then limit your dating pool.
Curious what his expectations are? Like, he wants you to be thin, groomed, house always neat and kids never cranky?
Anonymous wrote:I married a fund manager and he's in good shape and does not really have any of the issues people are complaining about. I guess he works a lot, but mostly from home. I work a lot, too. He does have extremely high expectations, and I feel them as his wife, and our kids definitely feel them, so that's something to consider if you'd prefer to coast through life a bit. OP, if you aren't married yet and you know this matters to you, then limit your dating pool.
Anonymous wrote:I married a fund manager and he's in good shape and does not really have any of the issues people are complaining about. I guess he works a lot, but mostly from home. I work a lot, too. He does have extremely high expectations, and I feel them as his wife, and our kids definitely feel them, so that's something to consider if you'd prefer to coast through life a bit. OP, if you aren't married yet and you know this matters to you, then limit your dating pool.
Anonymous wrote:The best situation is not marrying into it. It’s being born into it.