Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m bored I’ll play:
What is your relationship like with his family and visa versa?
Great. My uncle grew up with his uncles and father (they’re from a small county in VA). My parents love him too. I get along really well with his family as well.
We met my senior year of college and had been friends throughout the years. So, we’ve been around each other’s families for quite a while now.
What?!? Who cares about your uncle.
Be ready for momma baby status and him fighting for custody…and winning.
Anonymous wrote:You aren't married and you make peanuts, you need to be in your own house when the baby is born, so you can try to get primary custody and a big child support payment. That baby could net you at least $3-4 K a month if you play your cards right.
What's wrong with you? Get your ducks in a row now. You can't buy pampers with $500 diaper bag.
Don't put your name on the house or the mortgage, unless of course you are not on the mortgage, which would make you a super player ... if you can get your name on the deed but not the mortgage that's optimal.
Forget the investments you sound kind of stupid and he will probably just name you as a 100% beneficiary and then change it to his mother's name. You aren't married so he can easily remove you.
Consult a lawyer now so you can get an estimate of just how much money you are going to get. It would be awful if you end up another broke single mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have bigger fish to fry.
This. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but he has shown you he has zero respect for what you've been telling him. And when you try to hold firm on how you feel, he calls you rude instead accepting any wrongdoing on his part. You need to sit down and take a hard look at your relationship before you buy a house together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have bigger fish to fry.
This. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but he has shown you he has zero respect for what you've been telling him. And when you try to hold firm on how you feel, he calls you rude instead accepting any wrongdoing on his part. You need to sit down and take a hard look at your relationship before you buy a house together.
They are having a child together... that ship has sailed. But also, we have ALL received gifts from our spouse that we don't love. Maybe he is a gift person and really wanted her to like his gifts. I don't think that signals any kind of big personality defect in the guy. And yes, arguing about a gift is kind of rude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m bored I’ll play:
What is your relationship like with his family and visa versa?
Great. My uncle grew up with his uncles and father (they’re from a small county in VA). My parents love him too. I get along really well with his family as well.
We met my senior year of college and had been friends throughout the years. So, we’ve been around each other’s families for quite a while now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have bigger fish to fry.
This. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but he has shown you he has zero respect for what you've been telling him. And when you try to hold firm on how you feel, he calls you rude instead accepting any wrongdoing on his part. You need to sit down and take a hard look at your relationship before you buy a house together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same etiquette regarding gifts you do want to receive. Say "thank you."
You had your chance to tell him what to get you, and you passed on it with this "let's just save for the baby" stuff. You should have picked out something relatively inexpensive that you would actually like, because you know he's going to do this.
At any rate, agree with PP that you seem to have bigger problems.
I didn’t pick anything because we weren’t supposed to exchange gifts.
What’s the bigger fish to fry?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he’s only making $350k, it’s highly unlikely he has enough to retire in 4 years unless he sold a company for millions or something.
I agree he does not actually sound good with money (buying expensive things people don’t want is wasteful, even if you can technically “afford” it.)
Kids are expensive, especially childcare and college educations. You two need to get on the same page and once the baby arrives he’s going to need to start caring about what you think and want more than he currently does. He sounds like a steamroller.
He has a lot of bitcoin and investments. He’s also has a few properties as well. His dad retired at 45 as well from his investments.
I do agree that I need him to understand that spending money on frivolous things now that the baby is on the way is a no-go. I appreciate that he wants to give me “just because” gifts, so I think a conversation on spending limits needs to be had as well.
The problem is it is HIS MONEY. He can do whatever he wants. What are your childcare plans for the baby when you return to work? We’ll wait.
We both work from home and live close by to our families. So, they’ve agreed to watch the baby as needed.
As needed? If you work 8-5 M-F then you need care 8-5pm
Again OP, what is your age relative to the father? It sounds like he is digging in for control.
My schedule is pretty relaxed. I schedule my meetings and calls, and I spend most of my days sourcing (I'm in business development). My job is pretty flexible, and they don't check when I'm online. As long as I get my work done, all is good, so yes, as needed.
He's a year older than me.
Anonymous wrote:I’m bored I’ll play:
What is your relationship like with his family and visa versa?