Anonymous wrote:sorry, this is definitely a relationship question. while inheritances are not marital property, neither are gifts made explicitly to an individual spouse.
you commingled the gifts from your parents, and he commingled his inheritance, but he appears to be wanting to walk back just the latter, by having you "give" him money to an account in his name only. BUT! Gifts given to you by your spouse (and vise-versa) during the course of your marriage are marital property and are subject to equitable distribution anyway.
Personally, I'd have a strong suspicion that the friends he wants to travel with fall into the "with benefits" category. No, he is not right, and you should not "pay him back."
Anonymous wrote:Everyone I know who married a man whose father had walked out have ALL ended up divorced, no matter how much they swore they would never be like Dad. In his mind if your kids are grown, he is not doing the same thing.
Wake up and smell the coffee, OP. He is less and less invested in the family, earning dramatically less, while wanting $ to go to support his family and his trips. He is a taker and you and your parents have enabled him.
If you are still married after you inherit and comingle funds, I for one will be SHOCKED. He does not love you, he uses you and your parents for cash. After they die he can get 1/2 if comingled and his freedom. If they said they were leaving it all to ASPCA he'd leave sooner.
How did your parents get to be so wealthy while being so naive?
And why do you talk about "our" vs. "his" financial plans. There is no "our."
Anonymous wrote:Everyone I know who married a man whose father had walked out have ALL ended up divorced, no matter how much they swore they would never be like Dad. In his mind if your kids are grown, he is not doing the same thing.
Wake up and smell the coffee, OP. He is less and less invested in the family, earning dramatically less, while wanting $ to go to support his family and his trips. He is a taker and you and your parents have enabled him.
If you are still married after you inherit and comingle funds, I for one will be SHOCKED. He does not love you, he uses you and your parents for cash. After they die he can get 1/2 if comingled and his freedom. If they said they were leaving it all to ASPCA he'd leave sooner.
How did your parents get to be so wealthy while being so naive?
And why do you talk about "our" vs. "his" financial plans. There is no "our."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP -
To answer three questions:
1. His income is $4K/month after taxes.
2. This isn’t one trip. It’s 1-2 per year. Also I had a typo earlier, the trips are long weekends. The last one that he did not got to because of work was in February.
3. This isn’t divorce planning. His dad left his mom after an affair and it ruined his childhood and left them in near poverty. He lives in fear of divorce.
I’ve also explained to him that even if we took the remainder of the $45k from our joint accounts, they are still commingled assets. Just like I explain that our retirement accounts are marital property since both were created only immediately before we were married.
As also mentioned, he is in my parents will. He will get $200k.
Ugh OP. This is looking more and more like him getting his ducks in a row for divorce. His dad having an affair and leaving his mom in poverty makes him MORE likely to do it, not less.
Why on earth is he in your parents will??? It sounds like you and your parents have been complete doormats and he's been using you to financially support his desires and his family while he gives less and less and takes more and more.
WAKE UP!!! There's no non-nefarious reason for him to want you to give him $45K for his own personal use. There's no justification for it since he already spent it, but there also wouldn't be if he didn't spend it since he uses your money. The best case scenario is that he's continuing to use you to finance whatever he wants and treating you much worse than he demands that you treat him.
Who the $%^& is this raging narcissist to have both you and your parents believe that he should be revered and your role is to treat him above you while you pay for it? OP, you truly need therapy to learn to value yourself. Do this for your child if not for yourself. Don't raise them the way your parents raised you.
Because he has done a lot for them. My dad is very ill and he has gone over, by himself, a couple hours a week to help care for him for the last few years. So regardless of anything else my parents want to recognize that.
He is doing it for the $, OP, surely you and your parents can grasp that at this point? With his behavior and family history, I'd get an aggressive lawyer and get ready to file. That is when assets can be reallocated.
Anonymous wrote:Your husband seems dense tbh and you seem to be pretty tight with finances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - first, we don’t take home 15K a month. The nature of his job means that he brings home a guaranteed $4k/month and I bring home a guaranteed $3845 per pp (so $8.3k/month). The rest is bonuses, which are not guaranteed (and because he isn’t working too hard at work, his bonuses are more iffy). Our mortgage is $4K. Also while we give $500 to his mother and bother, that will increase and we also pay for plane tickets and hotels for them to visit us 2-3x a year. Also again, we didn’t have these salaries most of our marriage. Historically we were probably right below $200k.
We have some fairly costly home maintenance project that we have to save for. We also need a new car.
The guys trips are long weeks, so plane ride, hotel, dinner and excursions. I think the last one was $1500.
I think a prior poster hit the nail on the head when she said one of my frustrations is that my H doesn’t see/understand our financial picture. He has Mint so he sees all our accounts, but he doesn’t get our in and out expenses. I have tried to show him everything and explain it but he just doesn’t get it. He literally told me if he won $1M he could retire tomorrow.
I also think his focus on the boys weekends just makes part of me sad. The last time it came up, we were talking about him and I going away for a long weekend and things weren’t great at his job so we didn’t go. But a month later he wanted to fly to Portland for a guys weekend.
But again, it’s this sudden idea that he get his $45k back that frustrates me. He is obsessed with what money is his in the marriage and what is mine, even though his retirements accounts are higher than mine because he started maxing before me. And he doesn’t count all my parents gifts to us in his calculations.
This is not an expensive trip. My god, all this drama over that?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - first, we don’t take home 15K a month. The nature of his job means that he brings home a guaranteed $4k/month and I bring home a guaranteed $3845 per pp (so $8.3k/month). The rest is bonuses, which are not guaranteed (and because he isn’t working too hard at work, his bonuses are more iffy). Our mortgage is $4K. Also while we give $500 to his mother and bother, that will increase and we also pay for plane tickets and hotels for them to visit us 2-3x a year. Also again, we didn’t have these salaries most of our marriage. Historically we were probably right below $200k.
We have some fairly costly home maintenance project that we have to save for. We also need a new car.
The guys trips are long weeks, so plane ride, hotel, dinner and excursions. I think the last one was $1500.
I think a prior poster hit the nail on the head when she said one of my frustrations is that my H doesn’t see/understand our financial picture. He has Mint so he sees all our accounts, but he doesn’t get our in and out expenses. I have tried to show him everything and explain it but he just doesn’t get it. He literally told me if he won $1M he could retire tomorrow.
I also think his focus on the boys weekends just makes part of me sad. The last time it came up, we were talking about him and I going away for a long weekend and things weren’t great at his job so we didn’t go. But a month later he wanted to fly to Portland for a guys weekend.
But again, it’s this sudden idea that he get his $45k back that frustrates me. He is obsessed with what money is his in the marriage and what is mine, even though his retirements accounts are higher than mine because he started maxing before me. And he doesn’t count all my parents gifts to us in his calculations.