Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't care about his happiness or mental/physical health. You want enjoy your high income lifestyle. At least, be honest about it.
This. Holy crap.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you should consider moving to a lower COL area and he could be a partner in a smaller city. Fewer hours, less pressure, and lifestyle won’t change because money goes farther.
Anonymous wrote:How many years has he been a partner and what are you saving and investing per year now (excluding anything for the kids' education - since I view that for kids not you). Aren't you at the point/reaching the point where your investments are throwing off a few hundred thousand per yr -- i.e. another professional adult salary? Btwn that + DH making 150k as a fed (more like 200k if he goes to a financial regulator) + your NP salary -- is your net worth going to take as much of a hit as you think it is? I'm not suggesting your DH goes into the gov't and you start pulling 100k out of your brokerage account/investments yearly but you WILL have the luxury of supplementing 20k or 50k here and there for new cars/renovations/vacations -- things that regular feds don't have usually.
Anonymous wrote:Hey OP. I’m double biglaw now so I really understand what you’re saying. Ignore the MRA trolls. Nothing you said was selfish or wrong.
Making partner is a great gold star. You guys have a ton of longer term options. You’re totally right that the comp is back-loaded but walking away from partner *today* doesn’t mean walking away from that comp forever. I work at one of the old school white shoe firms an I know a bunch of partners who did a stint in gov or in house and came back. He just has to be strategic. Help him develop a long term plan that keeps doors open and him at home for a while.
Anonymous wrote:We are older but have gone through something similar. Well into our 30's we both had "big jobs" and it was unsustainable with three kids. Our choices were to both dial it back and find more flexible jobs that didn't require travel, or one of us quit. We talked about it at length and I quit. Fast forward 10+ years and DH wants out of the rat race. While I'd be totally happy to go back to work and trade places, that isn't possible. The job I had at age 35 is not going to hire me back at age 50.
After much talking we were able to work through a compromise. DH stayed at his job a few more years, in order for us to meet some financial goals that we defined, primarily funding college & retirement, and so that our kids could stay in their high school. DH recently quit and we are downsizing dramatically to a lower-cost area and lifestyle. I will go back to work -- but after watching me apply to jobs that DH is well aware that any dreams he had of me getting a big job are unrealistic.
I think it is ok to be a little bit upset that the bargain didn't work out. After all, you gave up your career and as much as posters are saying to go back to your old job, that probably isn't an option. Define what you need (for me that was our kids' education) and work from there. FWIW, it is really nice having DH around more after years of long hours and travel.

Anonymous wrote:You don't care about his happiness or mental/physical health. You want enjoy your high income lifestyle. At least, be honest about it.