Anonymous wrote:Here's what I judge -- and I know SO MANY of these including my very best friend:
The couple gets married in the courthouse for the health insurance and keep it quiet. Move in together and save up for four or five years for the $100000 gala wedding she's dreaming of. Then expect plenty of cash gifts "to help us start our life together."
You're already married, you've been married for years, and you would have a nice start if you hadn't spent so much on this wedding. We could have had an inexpensive party after your courthouse ceremony FIVE YEARS AGO that would have been just as fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm judgy about married couples that maintain separate finances.
I found out a close friend of mine does this. They have multiple kids and have been together for many years. I think it’s genius!
Anonymous wrote:I'm judgy about people who complain a lot about their spouses (or fight in front of other people more than an odd occasion) and also ones who brag a lot or go on too much about how great the spouse is. Something is wrong and you need to get real. No marriage is perfect or if it's so terrible, do something or break the complaining/public arguing habit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm judgy about married couples that maintain separate finances.
Why? My DH and I have been happily married for 20 years. When we met I had been working for a few years and had my own money. It felt like compromising my independence to share everything. I certainly didn’t want him going over my credit card bills. Perhaps o was jaded given the experience some women in my family had with over controlling husbands. Anyway, years went by, we consider all of our money “ours” and one or the other pays for things as they come up, big expenses we tend to split. There is no accounting of who paid what. It works for us. That being said we make somewhat similar salaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm judgy about married couples that maintain separate finances.
Why? My DH and I have been happily married for 20 years. When we met I had been working for a few years and had my own money. It felt like compromising my independence to share everything. I certainly didn’t want him going over my credit card bills. Perhaps o was jaded given the experience some women in my family had with over controlling husbands. Anyway, years went by, we consider all of our money “ours” and one or the other pays for things as they come up, big expenses we tend to split. There is no accounting of who paid what. It works for us. That being said we make somewhat similar salaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm judgy about married couples that maintain separate finances.
+1 unless it's a second marriage with kids, IMO separate finances mean you don't trust each other and have one foot out of the relationship to start with.
I give a pass to the 2nd marriage because you have to protect your kids and odds are 2nd marriages are more likely to fail anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Come on, tell us...what's your judgy-est, snobbiest thought about relationships?
Mine is that I've never met a marriage between high school sweethearts that I'm jealous of.
I've. They are interracial, interfaith and together since high school. Did go to college and grad schools in different states but kept coming back to each other, had wedding at 25 and are happily married now for years and both are quite successful. Families were skeptical but eventually came around seeing their dedication.
Anonymous wrote:I'm judgy about married couples that maintain separate finances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I judge when people post Happy Anniversary, Happy Birthday, or Happy Mother's/Father's Day posts on social media. YOU LIVE WITH YOUR SPOUSE - JUST TELL THEM IN REAL PERSON. I am totally judging you for the fact that you need external validation of how great your marriage/spouse is. It's pathetic.
Agreed. I think that most people posting these messages feel very insecure in their marriages. Or they are cheating and trying to hide it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm judgy about married couples that maintain separate finances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think women who are still happily married after 20+ years are just wilfully ignoring their partner's flaws to be happy. I can't understand it. But none of the marriages in my extended family are or were happy so I clearly don't know anything.
Yes, this is right! This is how to live with another person - you have to be blind about some things. But it's not a bad thing.