Anonymous wrote:A PP again.
At HHI of $200-ish K...
2 daycare bills...there is no prestige daycare where I live...I remember these bills together were about the cost of renting a 1 BR apt.
We did toddler music at home at low cost using DVDs of music educators and our own set of instruments.
Kids went to nice summer day camps all summer long at elementary school age...$300-400 ea. per week. Zoo, robotics, entrepreneurship, etc.
One kid did two years of martial arts.
Both went through swim lessons from early toddler to highest lesson level before swim team at the local Y.
We took the kids skiing and snowboarding and each had some ski school and formal lessons. Hundreds of dollars each season.
Each started music lessons in 6th grade which is very late. $25/half hour min per kid, weekly. I wanted them to love music, not force it. My first music lesson with an instrument was at 4 years old. Husband also started early. They were fine for high school orchestra...but would never be recruited to college to round out an ensemble. One does a local youth orchestra on top of school orchestra ($400 a year). We also sent them each to music sleepaway camp 1-2 times each...about $1,200 for ten days each enrollment.
For several years in middle school/high school, spent about $650/mo. on franchise math tutoring for both, during the school year. Needed to solidify their math skill sets post-pandemic and keep their grades up.
We avoided sports...no time for youth soccer without trashing our workweek and weekends. No other team sports would have been a good fit. Saved a lot that way and the kids didn't care. But it was a bit counterculture.
Sent each kid to a special language or study abroad camp 1x during high school. $6K for the language camp, maybe $8K for the study abroad camp, including airfare.
High school ECs were pretty inexpensive. From what I see, sports and anything that travels outside the metro are the things that raise costs.
Our townhouse is relatively inexpensive. I gather in the outskirts of Bethesda, it might be a $700K property, based on age and size. This frees up money for these luxuries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry OP. This is a hard one.
Does your wife work and contribute meaningfully to HH income? What is she spending excessively on? (clothes, house, vacations, etc?)
Before leaping to divorce and breaking up your kids' home, what have you done to rein this in?
She does work but I make the bulk of our income.
We have 3.5 year old twins. We both want what’s best for their future but my wife goes overboard.
Excessive spending
- Most expensive daycare
- Most expensive preschool
- An expensive I caved and bought
- A new car
- expensive activities for the kids
- A tutor for the kids ( no joke)
- wasting hundreds each shopping trip
- always purchases random crap she sees online
This is just the tip of the iceberg. She didn’t use to be this way. Motherhood has made her very competitive.
This post is a huge red flag for me…about you.
Because it shouldn’t be relevant whether the preschool is the “most expensive” or the activity is “expensive.” The only question is if it fits in your budget. If it doesn’t, it’s too expensive even if it’s the cheapest preschool and the activity is the cheapest activity.
I don’t think any couple can be happy if you’re trying to agree on what’s “expensive” or “reasonable” or whatever. People are going to make different calls within a budget. It’s being within the budget that you have to agree on, and you have to agree on the long term plan that is the foundation for the budget.
You are the absolute worst kind of woman. Man-hater. OP already said they are living above their means. What more do you need? Disgusting. I bet you don't have a job and spend your husband's money like there's no tomorrow. What a POS.
Anonymous wrote:Just move to a smaller house. Also why does she have to work at that level of household money? If she wants to help her kids why doesn't she stay home for a time? They are twins. 10 years will go by and she can go back to work. Meanwhile you will have more say on the expenses. She will have to use the time she has with the kids. She can watch or read whatever training she wants for the kids while they are at preschool and then be with the kids in the afternoon. Being more around other moms may also soften her a bit. Give her a debit card to use each month with a set amount on it till she reins in her spending.
I hope you don't want your kids growing up in a divorced household. That doesn't seem to serve anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Just move to a smaller house. Also why does she have to work at that level of household money? If she wants to help her kids why doesn't she stay home for a time? They are twins. 10 years will go by and she can go back to work. Meanwhile you will have more say on the expenses. She will have to use the time she has with the kids. She can watch or read whatever training she wants for the kids while they are at preschool and then be with the kids in the afternoon. Being more around other moms may also soften her a bit. Give her a debit card to use each month with a set amount on it till she reins in her spending.
I hope you don't want your kids growing up in a divorced household. That doesn't seem to serve anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is your income? Hers versus yours? How much does spend a month? How much was your home and her new car?
Our income is in the mid 600’s. I make close to $500 and her the rest.
Our monthly cost are close to $22k for just the basics. She spends 2-3k a month on whatever she wants.
House was $2.3m. Car was $30k.
You live in a two million dollar house and are complaining?