Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really? At one point I was paying $2,100/mo in Maryland. So a year's tuition at UVA was being paid in CS by me.
If your kid was a MD resident, $2100 is not even close to enough to cover a year of college at UVA. Also, many parents pay for college and still cover their kids’ other expenses (college is only 8 months a year) - paying cs is the bare minimum for a parent.
Exactly - UVA is what, 30k/year? The guy is a jerk. It's the parent with most assets (not the one who cheated) should pay. Children are not guilty for their mother or father cheating. But it's usually cheating dads who think CS is all they owe to kids
Any woman who considers having kids should have minimum expectations from men and rely only on her financials for kids' college. That's the unfortunate truth. My exH is a millionaire, he doesn't want even to pay $50 for private lessons couple times a month for our special needs child. I pay
Anonymous wrote:Really? At one point I was paying $2,100/mo in Maryland. So a year's tuition at UVA was being paid in CS by me.
If your kid was a MD resident, $2100 is not even close to enough to cover a year of college at UVA. Also, many parents pay for college and still cover their kids’ other expenses (college is only 8 months a year) - paying cs is the bare minimum for a parent.
Really? At one point I was paying $2,100/mo in Maryland. So a year's tuition at UVA was being paid in CS by me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being married or divorced has nothing to do with paying for college
Lol, WTF… of course it does.
Selfish is as selfish does
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
What kind of awful parent would refuse to pay for their child's college (if they had the funds for it)? It should have nothing to do with the ex-spouse.
Here's an idea: the parent with the most assets should pay for college, rather than the parent with the most income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in NY state at the time, but when my child went to college I was forced to pay child support until the child was 21. So the support could be (and was in our case) used for college.
Don’t be funny. CS would be enough for college if you are a multi millionaire . For mid level income it’s only community college
Really? At one point I was paying $2,100/mo in Maryland. So a year's tuition at UVA was being paid in CS by me.
What’s about living expenses ?
Exactly. I didn't have any money left to cover living expenses after paying rent and CS.
I meant your child's living expenses in college. You or your spouse should have accumulated a nice home equity after many years of marriage, didn't you? In Germany, for example, there is an obligation to fully cover college education for kids at same level as the divorced parents. You can't tell kids stay with HS diploma if you have masters' yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in NY state at the time, but when my child went to college I was forced to pay child support until the child was 21. So the support could be (and was in our case) used for college.
Don’t be funny. CS would be enough for college if you are a multi millionaire . For mid level income it’s only community college
Really? At one point I was paying $2,100/mo in Maryland. So a year's tuition at UVA was being paid in CS by me.
What’s about living expenses ?
Exactly. I didn't have any money left to cover living expenses after paying rent and CS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in NY state at the time, but when my child went to college I was forced to pay child support until the child was 21. So the support could be (and was in our case) used for college.
Don’t be funny. CS would be enough for college if you are a multi millionaire . For mid level income it’s only community college
Really? At one point I was paying $2,100/mo in Maryland. So a year's tuition at UVA was being paid in CS by me.
What’s about living expenses ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being married or divorced has nothing to do with paying for college
Lol, WTF… of course it does.
Selfish is as selfish does
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
What kind of awful parent would refuse to pay for their child's college (if they had the funds for it)? It should have nothing to do with the ex-spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in NY state at the time, but when my child went to college I was forced to pay child support until the child was 21. So the support could be (and was in our case) used for college.
Don’t be funny. CS would be enough for college if you are a multi millionaire . For mid level income it’s only community college
Really? At one point I was paying $2,100/mo in Maryland. So a year's tuition at UVA was being paid in CS by me.
Anonymous wrote:My wife would threaten that--she was going to divorce me when the kids went to college. So I filed for divorce 8 years before the oldest went to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in NY state at the time, but when my child went to college I was forced to pay child support until the child was 21. So the support could be (and was in our case) used for college.
Don’t be funny. CS would be enough for college if you are a multi millionaire . For mid level income it’s only community college
Anonymous wrote:I was in NY state at the time, but when my child went to college I was forced to pay child support until the child was 21. So the support could be (and was in our case) used for college.
Anonymous wrote:This is why I always tell parents who feel like they're going to divorce when the kid is in college to just DO IT NOW.
Financially, I have no comment. My parents' divorce attorneys negotiated all that for them.
But, emotionally for me as a college senior and my brother as a college freshman, it was TERRIBLE. I wish they had just done it when I was younger, at least then I would have had peers with similar experiences. Going through it as a young adult was deeply traumatizing and I still have lingering issues to this day.
(And, no, my parents didn't "fool" me with their 'happy marriage' until their divorce, either. We, as kids, knew something was up for years.)