Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she quits and stays home there aren't making the same. And she may not have the same job available or same income if when she wants to go back. MORON. Any way you slice it divorcing her will be WAY more expensive than her staying home and staying married
Yea, you’re still the moron. If she quits and he files for divorce there will be no alimony. She isn’t a long term SAHM with no skills. She’s a woman who just voluntarily quit her job. She can choose not to go back to work, but she won’t get alimony. And since they’ll impute income for child support, and they make the same, there’s no child support.
Anonymous wrote:
I understand it takes 2 people to support being a sahm. After awhile, how much more money is enough? It doesn't seem enough for my husband but it's enough for me. I would rather stay home and spend time with my young children as well as working on my mental health. Divorce is the last resort but a marriage of resentment and unhappiiness isn't a much of a better life.
Anonymous wrote:If she quits and stays home there aren't making the same. And she may not have the same job available or same income if when she wants to go back. MORON. Any way you slice it divorcing her will be WAY more expensive than her staying home and staying married
Anonymous wrote:Since when is a million dollar home a dream home? That's cheap. I live in Toronto. My networth is 2.5 million and my home is worth 2.4 million.
Its not even extravagant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she quits and stays home there aren't making the same. And she may not have the same job available or same income if when she wants to go back. MORON. Any way you slice it divorcing her will be WAY more expensive than her staying home and staying married
Depends on what state. Voluntary job quit is considered in some states and income can be calculated based on past earnings.
Anonymous wrote:If she quits and stays home there aren't making the same. And she may not have the same job available or same income if when she wants to go back. MORON. Any way you slice it divorcing her will be WAY more expensive than her staying home and staying married
Anonymous wrote:It just seems like you are both digging in your heels on all or nothing - there are a million options or scenarios that would be between here and there - I would start with individual counseling for you - you need support and life has been really tough. I would also try to talk to your husband in a heart to heart problem solving mode of how to make things more manageable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you both make around the same and he doesn't want you to be a SAHM, I'm confused why you would ask him if he would stay home. He wants two incomes. If you can afford not to work but just maybe not the same lifestyle and savings accumulation and he isn't willing to budge that is hard to get past. How old are the kids? Perhaps you can take a several month- year leave of absence? Or is working from home an option? There is a ton of benefit to kids having a parent home with them in those early years and I would make that case as strong as I could. If he still didn't agree and you still feel strongly about it, don't work. If you can afford not to be can't force you to. There will be resentment if you work or don't work from one of you. Him resenting you for staying home and nurturing your kids is pretty low- but at least your kids benefit
Really? So when he views her quitting work unilaterally as a betrayal and initiates divorce proceedings, she won't be forced to go back to work?
Depends how much alimony and child support he would be paying she may not have to go anytime soon. He would be an idiot to divorce and would lose way more money than if he would come to terms for her being a SAHM at least temporarily
You can't get those years back, I would and did stay home. She can always go back to work, he can just stuff it.
And when he decides not to just hand over his paycheck, how happy do you think she will be?
He chose to get married and have children. At this point he has no choice but to hand over his paycheck either willingly or by court order
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you both make around the same and he doesn't want you to be a SAHM, I'm confused why you would ask him if he would stay home. He wants two incomes. If you can afford not to work but just maybe not the same lifestyle and savings accumulation and he isn't willing to budge that is hard to get past. How old are the kids? Perhaps you can take a several month- year leave of absence? Or is working from home an option? There is a ton of benefit to kids having a parent home with them in those early years and I would make that case as strong as I could. If he still didn't agree and you still feel strongly about it, don't work. If you can afford not to be can't force you to. There will be resentment if you work or don't work from one of you. Him resenting you for staying home and nurturing your kids is pretty low- but at least your kids benefit
Really? So when he views her quitting work unilaterally as a betrayal and initiates divorce proceedings, she won't be forced to go back to work?
Depends how much alimony and child support he would be paying she may not have to go anytime soon. He would be an idiot to divorce and would lose way more money than if he would come to terms for her being a SAHM at least temporarily
You can't get those years back, I would and did stay home. She can always go back to work, he can just stuff it.
And when he decides not to just hand over his paycheck, how happy do you think she will be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you both make around the same and he doesn't want you to be a SAHM, I'm confused why you would ask him if he would stay home. He wants two incomes. If you can afford not to work but just maybe not the same lifestyle and savings accumulation and he isn't willing to budge that is hard to get past. How old are the kids? Perhaps you can take a several month- year leave of absence? Or is working from home an option? There is a ton of benefit to kids having a parent home with them in those early years and I would make that case as strong as I could. If he still didn't agree and you still feel strongly about it, don't work. If you can afford not to be can't force you to. There will be resentment if you work or don't work from one of you. Him resenting you for staying home and nurturing your kids is pretty low- but at least your kids benefit
Really? So when he views her quitting work unilaterally as a betrayal and initiates divorce proceedings, she won't be forced to go back to work?
Depends how much alimony and child support he would be paying she may not have to go anytime soon. He would be an idiot to divorce and would lose way more money than if he would come to terms for her being a SAHM at least temporarily
You can't get those years back, I would and did stay home. She can always go back to work, he can just stuff it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you both make around the same and he doesn't want you to be a SAHM, I'm confused why you would ask him if he would stay home. He wants two incomes. If you can afford not to work but just maybe not the same lifestyle and savings accumulation and he isn't willing to budge that is hard to get past. How old are the kids? Perhaps you can take a several month- year leave of absence? Or is working from home an option? There is a ton of benefit to kids having a parent home with them in those early years and I would make that case as strong as I could. If he still didn't agree and you still feel strongly about it, don't work. If you can afford not to be can't force you to. There will be resentment if you work or don't work from one of you. Him resenting you for staying home and nurturing your kids is pretty low- but at least your kids benefit
Really? So when he views her quitting work unilaterally as a betrayal and initiates divorce proceedings, she won't be forced to go back to work?
Depends how much alimony and child support he would be paying she may not have to go anytime soon. He would be an idiot to divorce and would lose way more money than if he would come to terms for her being a SAHM at least temporarily
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you both make around the same and he doesn't want you to be a SAHM, I'm confused why you would ask him if he would stay home. He wants two incomes. If you can afford not to work but just maybe not the same lifestyle and savings accumulation and he isn't willing to budge that is hard to get past. How old are the kids? Perhaps you can take a several month- year leave of absence? Or is working from home an option? There is a ton of benefit to kids having a parent home with them in those early years and I would make that case as strong as I could. If he still didn't agree and you still feel strongly about it, don't work. If you can afford not to be can't force you to. There will be resentment if you work or don't work from one of you. Him resenting you for staying home and nurturing your kids is pretty low- but at least your kids benefit
Really? So when he views her quitting work unilaterally as a betrayal and initiates divorce proceedings, she won't be forced to go back to work?
Depends how much alimony and child support he would be paying she may not have to go anytime soon. He would be an idiot to divorce and would lose way more money than if he would come to terms for her being a SAHM at least temporarily