Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a little surprised at the uniform reactions on this one. Plenty of people I know went to college with zero help from parents.
Of course there is a ton of life long resentment for it. So your husband and you should be prepared for that.
The other thing is the kids will be forced to make 1 of 2 choices: take a lucrative career they might not like or decide they aren't financially stable enough to have kids. So you all also may need to accept not having grandkids.
Are they your age? The college finance game has changed dramatically in 25 years.
Fairly recently, I had about 140K in loans with my parents. I also had friends with divorced parents where one parent refused to help so it was my friend and their other parent that had to take out all the loans.
Your parents loaned you the money? Did they charge interest? What was the repayment term?
You can’t get student loans in excess of about 37k total for undergrad without a parent co-signer.
They cosigned and I was responsible for making payments. That's usually the arrangement friends had with parents that refused to pay for college.
Anonymous wrote:Is your husband planning to leave when the kids turn 18, wash his hands off them and start a new family? His position doesn’t make any sense otherwise.
Their parents refused to pay for college but willingly cosigned on loans?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a little surprised at the uniform reactions on this one. Plenty of people I know went to college with zero help from parents.
Of course there is a ton of life long resentment for it. So your husband and you should be prepared for that.
The other thing is the kids will be forced to make 1 of 2 choices: take a lucrative career they might not like or decide they aren't financially stable enough to have kids. So you all also may need to accept not having grandkids.
Are they your age? The college finance game has changed dramatically in 25 years.
Fairly recently, I had about 140K in loans with my parents. I also had friends with divorced parents where one parent refused to help so it was my friend and their other parent that had to take out all the loans.
Your parents loaned you the money? Did they charge interest? What was the repayment term?
You can’t get student loans in excess of about 37k total for undergrad without a parent co-signer.
They cosigned and I was responsible for making payments. That's usually the arrangement friends had with parents that refused to pay for college.
Anonymous wrote:I’m saying this as someone who didn’t have parental support for undergrad or graduate school, and got through on scholarships and working, I disagree wholeheartedly with your husband. Your husband sounds like an a$$.
Anonymous wrote:My husband thinks our kids should pay for their own college tuition. His view is that it’s their education, and paying for it themselves will teach responsibility—that they’re adults and don’t need mom and dad footing the bill, and that it creates spoiled entitled brats.
That’s how I was raised too. My parents made me and my four younger siblings pay our own way. I chose a pretty expensive school, and we all managed, but it definitely wasn’t easy.
The difference is that my husband had his college fully paid for, as did his two siblings.
When we got married, I still had about $60,000 left in student loans from my private undergrad, and graduate degrees and thankfully my in-laws were kind enough to pay off the rest of my loans, which I was incredibly grateful for.
On one hand, I do think there’s value in having some skin in the game. On the other hand, I know firsthand how heavy that burden can feel, and I’m not sure I want that for our kids since we’re in the position to help.
I also think about my career and how my own student debt impacted me. During college and grad school, I worked multiple jobs to help pay off my loans and was really careful about my spending. I put almost every paycheck toward my debt and was responsible about not overspending. I’m proud of how I managed it, but I also know how hard it was, and how long it took me to feel financially stable.
My husband, on the other hand, is a corporate, and has never had to pay loans. He believes our kids can learn responsibility the same way I did—by working hard and managing their own finances. He thinks that by earning and managing their own money, our kids will learn responsibility too. But when I point out that his parents paid for his college and that he’s still a responsible person,he still says we shouldn’t do the same for our kids. He believes they should handle it themselves.
For those who’ve been through this debate with your husband—did you have your kids pay their own way, contribute partially, or cover it for them? Do you feel like it actually made a difference in terms of responsibility, or just added stress and debt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a little surprised at the uniform reactions on this one. Plenty of people I know went to college with zero help from parents.
Of course there is a ton of life long resentment for it. So your husband and you should be prepared for that.
The other thing is the kids will be forced to make 1 of 2 choices: take a lucrative career they might not like or decide they aren't financially stable enough to have kids. So you all also may need to accept not having grandkids.
Are they your age? The college finance game has changed dramatically in 25 years.
Fairly recently, I had about 140K in loans with my parents. I also had friends with divorced parents where one parent refused to help so it was my friend and their other parent that had to take out all the loans.
Your parents loaned you the money? Did they charge interest? What was the repayment term?
You can’t get student loans in excess of about 37k total for undergrad without a parent co-signer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a little surprised at the uniform reactions on this one. Plenty of people I know went to college with zero help from parents.
Of course there is a ton of life long resentment for it. So your husband and you should be prepared for that.
The other thing is the kids will be forced to make 1 of 2 choices: take a lucrative career they might not like or decide they aren't financially stable enough to have kids. So you all also may need to accept not having grandkids.
Are they your age? The college finance game has changed dramatically in 25 years.
Fairly recently, I had about 140K in loans with my parents. I also had friends with divorced parents where one parent refused to help so it was my friend and their other parent that had to take out all the loans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a little surprised at the uniform reactions on this one. Plenty of people I know went to college with zero help from parents.
Of course there is a ton of life long resentment for it. So your husband and you should be prepared for that.
The other thing is the kids will be forced to make 1 of 2 choices: take a lucrative career they might not like or decide they aren't financially stable enough to have kids. So you all also may need to accept not having grandkids.
Are they your age? The college finance game has changed dramatically in 25 years.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a little surprised at the uniform reactions on this one. Plenty of people I know went to college with zero help from parents.
Of course there is a ton of life long resentment for it. So your husband and you should be prepared for that.
The other thing is the kids will be forced to make 1 of 2 choices: take a lucrative career they might not like or decide they aren't financially stable enough to have kids. So you all also may need to accept not having grandkids.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a little surprised at the uniform reactions on this one. Plenty of people I know went to college with zero help from parents.
Of course there is a ton of life long resentment for it. So your husband and you should be prepared for that.
The other thing is the kids will be forced to make 1 of 2 choices: take a lucrative career they might not like or decide they aren't financially stable enough to have kids. So you all also may need to accept not having grandkids.