Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't afford a mortgage on take home of 12k per month? Sure you can.
You should be stashing a ton of money for yourself, at your current income. Prepare for divorce. It sounds like he is. Pay for childcare so you can study for the exam, if that is of importance right now.
$12K a month is my family's entire gross pay and we're not badly off. There's zero reason to have money problems (either needing a provider OR complaining about someone not putting their weight on that income.
OP here. Decent houses in the area where we would both like to live start at around $2m. So my $12k take-home pay (before taxes) will not go far. But I agree, I should not aspire to live in that expensive place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are an attorney and have taken a bar exam I don’t know why you have to study so much. I’ve take. A couple of bar exams and didn’t even stop working full time for the first one.
Honestly I don’t see why you can’t do it. You shouldn’t have to sit with an eight year old for virtual school. And you certainly are t working many hours if you’re only billing $10-$15k a month.
Your marriage and life is a mess. But taking care of an 8 year old and working a few hours a week shouldn’t prevent you from preparing for a second bar exam.
OP here. PP, I'm happy for your that the bar exams were a breeze for you. I don't find it easy, also because I work in a very niche field where I do not get to use 95% of the things that are on the bar.
Yes, I work part-time as an attorney, but almost-full time as a teacher/tutor, basically.
Point is you choose to teach/tutor your 8 year old. It’s not necessary. Like I said, I think your marriage is a mess. But I also think if you were on board with this bar exam you would figure it out. Because your life is filled with ways to make time that you choose not to take.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are an attorney and have taken a bar exam I don’t know why you have to study so much. I’ve take. A couple of bar exams and didn’t even stop working full time for the first one.
Honestly I don’t see why you can’t do it. You shouldn’t have to sit with an eight year old for virtual school. And you certainly are t working many hours if you’re only billing $10-$15k a month.
Your marriage and life is a mess. But taking care of an 8 year old and working a few hours a week shouldn’t prevent you from preparing for a second bar exam.
OP here. PP, I'm happy for your that the bar exams were a breeze for you. I don't find it easy, also because I work in a very niche field where I do not get to use 95% of the things that are on the bar.
Yes, I work part-time as an attorney, but almost-full time as a teacher/tutor, basically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you need to move away? All schools in the DC area were virtual anyway. I know dozens of parents who stayed here and no one got COVID-19. You moving away was BS. Why take your kid out of the school system?
Where is the whole story. Also, not fair for your husband to work and support you while you stay away with his son.
PP, my son is enrolled in a regular private school, he is not being home-schooled. Where we are now schools were expected to stay open, but sadly didn't. I moved here for the purpose of enabling my son to have a normal school experience.
My husband is not supporting me. Currently I earn enough to pay for our living expenses.
Anonymous wrote:If you are an attorney and have taken a bar exam I don’t know why you have to study so much. I’ve take. A couple of bar exams and didn’t even stop working full time for the first one.
Honestly I don’t see why you can’t do it. You shouldn’t have to sit with an eight year old for virtual school. And you certainly are t working many hours if you’re only billing $10-$15k a month.
Your marriage and life is a mess. But taking care of an 8 year old and working a few hours a week shouldn’t prevent you from preparing for a second bar exam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't afford a mortgage on take home of 12k per month? Sure you can.
You should be stashing a ton of money for yourself, at your current income. Prepare for divorce. It sounds like he is. Pay for childcare so you can study for the exam, if that is of importance right now.
$12K a month is my family's entire gross pay and we're not badly off. There's zero reason to have money problems (either needing a provider OR complaining about someone not putting their weight on that income.
OP here. Decent houses in the area where we would both like to live start at around $2m. So my $12k take-home pay (before taxes) will not go far. But I agree, I should not aspire to live in that expensive place.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you need to move away? All schools in the DC area were virtual anyway. I know dozens of parents who stayed here and no one got COVID-19. You moving away was BS. Why take your kid out of the school system?
Where is the whole story. Also, not fair for your husband to work and support you while you stay away with his son.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. He says he is giving me three years to maximize my earning potential, and we should divorce then. He is being understanding and supportive.
I am totally on the fence about divorcing. On one hand he is getting on my nerves. On the other hand I believe that parenting an elementary-school child is a family project and should not be left to me alone, also to cope with earnings losses due to unequal child care responsibilities. He absolutely cannot be counted on to care for the kid, as he does not plan to change his work schedule of 5 a.m. to 7 p.m.
We plan to move to an expensive state, and I could definitely not pay mortgage payments for a decent home even with a take-home pay of $12k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So let me get this straight. His position is that you need to take the bar so you can earn more money so he can divorce you and not pay as much support. And since you’re not studying for the bar to make more money so it’s easier for him to divorce you, you must be a lazy person. And some part of you looks at this scenario and thinks huh, maybe I am lazy and not doing enough. Instead of, perhaps, just maybe, thinking holy crap, I’m married to a horrible human and maybe this is an emotionally unhealthy situation for not only myself, but also my child. Because if your thought process is the former rather than the later, he has done a number on you and you need some sort of giant wake-up call. I hope this thread is it.
OP here. Sadly, it is the former... PP, thank you for the wake-up call. I just don't understand how my husband can have so little empathy for me. He says I am making excuses for not hiring enough online tutors.
Anonymous wrote:So let me get this straight. His position is that you need to take the bar so you can earn more money so he can divorce you and not pay as much support. And since you’re not studying for the bar to make more money so it’s easier for him to divorce you, you must be a lazy person. And some part of you looks at this scenario and thinks huh, maybe I am lazy and not doing enough. Instead of, perhaps, just maybe, thinking holy crap, I’m married to a horrible human and maybe this is an emotionally unhealthy situation for not only myself, but also my child. Because if your thought process is the former rather than the later, he has done a number on you and you need some sort of giant wake-up call. I hope this thread is it.