Anonymous wrote:
Fight for yourself and your kids. No one else is going to do it.
People who don't fight in life get the short end of the stick.
Anonymous wrote:I make sure I pay off my parents mortgage and give them 300K in cash before I even think about getting married.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have separated finances over these issues. My kids' college savings are more important than my in-law's expenses, some of which included golfing and vacations to see DH's other siblings. Now, we have to account for things in a way that I dislike, but it was the only way to stop the bleeding. DH pays his share of our household expenses and then does what he does with what's leftover. It means he's been under-saving for his retirement, but at least I'm not under-saving, and my kids have money for college.
It would be wise to divorce, in that case. You can continue to live together as before, and when it's time to qualify for senior care, he can get it without costing you too much.
Anonymous wrote:No way. If you don't even own your own house yet, that's ludicrous. I think it's the wrong thing to do and think it was gutsy of them to even ask. They are actually putting home ownership further out of reach from their grandchild when they had their whole lives to save for retirement.
How much is left on their mortgage? Are they still working? Can they move to a cheaper home?
Anonymous wrote:We have separated finances over these issues. My kids' college savings are more important than my in-law's expenses, some of which included golfing and vacations to see DH's other siblings. Now, we have to account for things in a way that I dislike, but it was the only way to stop the bleeding. DH pays his share of our household expenses and then does what he does with what's leftover. It means he's been under-saving for his retirement, but at least I'm not under-saving, and my kids have money for college.
Anonymous wrote:This is sooo ridiculous I almost think OP is a troll. "A cheaper apartment"?? Of course that is what they do.
OP’s DH is ridiculous but so are you. You could easily afford to triple that amount to get her out of poverty. Cheapo
Anonymous wrote:No advice, but some commiseration.
My inlaws have made terrible financial decisions. FIL owns his own business which tanked during covid (now recovering), and DH was helping out with the business quite a bit, unpaid. I told him, I dont care if you are helping, thats fine, but if you ever give them money without talking to me, that is financial infidelity. My BIL is married to a big law partner and they make prob 3x what we make. He started "contributing" to their finances, and I think his wife snapped him out of it. They live in a 5 bedroom house as empty nesters. They cant use the stairs, so we installed a chair lift for them. They can't go down to the basement. But they WILL NOT sell the house and downsize. They keep saying how they owe a double mortgage on the house, but their mortgage is much less than what the house would be valued for. I dont understand why they would rather keep paying this off piece meal with interest, rather than selling and buying a small apartment. I think MIL and FIL actually hate each other so that's probably one reason lol. They like having a big house so they can just stay separate.
Anyways. That's not even as bad as your situation, as we do own our own home. But you need to have a come to jesus talk with him asap. Otherwise it will end up snowballing and soon he will bank roll their entire life.