Anonymous wrote:You need to give permission for him to do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going forward, make sure you save your earned income in accounts that are in your own name, like your 401k and maybe a brokerage account. Possession is 9/10 of the law.
Well yeah but when it comes to the divorce settlement everything goes in a big pile and gets divided by two regardless of whose name is on it.
Anonymous wrote:Not shocking. Men can and will disappoint you.
That was not the lesson I got from this thread. Personally, I found the behavior of the OP, who did not support her husband when she had cancer, extremely disappointing. Should I now say that women can and will disappoint you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going forward, make sure you save your earned income in accounts that are in your own name, like your 401k and maybe a brokerage account. Possession is 9/10 of the law.
Well yeah but when it comes to the divorce settlement everything goes in a big pile and gets divided by two regardless of whose name is on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is over. Sounds like you weren’t very supportive.
This needs to be talked out. Caretakers of ill people (mentally ill, diseased ill, physically ill) who ALSO work and run the family and children have a TON on their plate logistically, physically, emotionally, etc. They are also dealing with caring for an ill person, the healthcare/insurance/doctor system, and possibly daily treatment schedules for the ill person.
Many individuals would collapse under this or need substantial high quality help and the mean$ to afford it.
What does that even mean “not supportive (enough)”?
My spouse is incapable of being supportive. In all realms. Thus I have other people as PoA, and looped in to help with issues. He’d freeze, he hide at work, he’s hire the first “nurse” he could find on a google search and never speak with them.
Finally, caretaking a grumpy or depressed person is draining. Not all patients are nice and appreciative 24/7, and some are downright hostile. Even your own child, parent or spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Going forward, make sure you save your earned income in accounts that are in your own name, like your 401k and maybe a brokerage account. Possession is 9/10 of the law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is over. Sounds like you weren’t very supportive.
This needs to be talked out. Caretakers of ill people (mentally ill, diseased ill, physically ill) who ALSO work and run the family and children have a TON on their plate logistically, physically, emotionally, etc. They are also dealing with caring for an ill person, the healthcare/insurance/doctor system, and possibly daily treatment schedules for the ill person.
Many individuals would collapse under this or need substantial high quality help and the mean$ to afford it.
What does that even mean “not supportive (enough)”?
My spouse is incapable of being supportive. In all realms. Thus I have other people as PoA, and looped in to help with issues. He’d freeze, he hide at work, he’d hire the first “nurse” he could find on a google search and never speak with them.
Finally, caretaking a grumpy or depressed person is draining. Not all patients are nice and appreciative 24/7, and some are downright hostile. Even your own child, parent or spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like he just told you he’s going to file for divorce. Hope that demanding job was worth it.
She was helping support the family. Give her a break. Marriage is a financial partnership by law; not an emotional one.
What a weird response. Fully irrelevant. He is divorcing her because she wasn’t supportive when he needed it.
Well, to be realistic, someone has to pay the bills. Most couples don't have enough in savings for both to just stop working if one becomes ill. Most people have health insurance tied to employment as well.
Anonymous wrote:My husband just told me that he too me off his life insurance as beneficiary. He basically told me it was b/c I was so unsupportive during his cancer treatment. He said it now all goes to the children.