Anonymous wrote:Really? Your teenage daughter has all of these concerns about her still married parents reflecting poorly on her future prospects? That's a very unusual for a teenager to be so forward thinking. Who is putting these ideas in her head?
Anonymous wrote:Some potential partners do judge based on this criteria. It is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I understand your general sentiment OP but I find your example of your husbands narcissism odd. I would not expect news like that to be broadcasted to my in laws unless there was a specific reason / context. Never mind expecting my husband to bring it up in a conversation just between him and his mother. You do realize they might have been or may want to talk about things not related to you?
OP here. I am not sure what would be odd about letting his mom know that the huge effort and expense of the law school has paid off and that I could finally start a new phase in my life by working as a lawyer.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like she's rationalizing why she doesn't have a boyfriend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are right to be concerned, and so is she (sounds like she is very thoughtful for her age).
Once she is in her early 20s, the boys from good families will absolutely be considering your family dynamic before proposing marriage. Their families will insist on it and they will, by then, naturally be considering it themselves.
So now is the time to get your house in order so that you do not burden her and limit her marriage prospects.
The boys from bad families won't care, but I assume you'd rather she didn't marry them.
OP here. Thanks for your thoughtful reply. I would absolutely love to "get my house in order". Unfortunately divorce seems to be the only way, which I think I cannot afford now. But I also have to keep in mind how my daughter will be affected by the constant quarrel at home.
Unfortunately, that ship has already sailed. The only thing you can try to do is mitigate the damage. Ask yourself a hard question. Is it unaffordable because you can't maintain your current standard of living, or is it unaffordable because you really couldn't even swing a studio apartment? What exactly is it you are waiting for?
OP here. I could not maintain my standard of living. We would need to sell our house. With the current interest rates I could not afford to buy even a small house in a less desirable area. Hoping to stick it out a bit longer...
Anonymous wrote:She's right, but she's also wrong, in that by far the most important criteria for marriage is HER intelligence, kindness, money/career and beauty (maybe the last is most important in the eyes of some men, but maybe don't insist on that).
Anyway. What I'm impressed with is that she can express this and have a mature conversation about it. At her age, I wasn't even thinking about boys, let alone in-laws.
You need to really insist that what SHE makes of herself is the most important. Both for her own happiness, and sense of self-worth, and for any future relationships.