Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m definitely not a SAHM. I also make more than my husband. I’ve been asking him to see a counselor forever but he’s always so busy with work, he says he doesn’t have the time. He reminds me how little we have when I buy a coffee work or want to sign our kids up for a sport (currently only one is doing one sport). He’s going from $80ks to $60ks.
Have you run the numbers with him? That much of a change will be a significant decrease in your monthly cash flow. It could be $1,000 to $1,200 a month less cash or more. Can you guys afford that?
Note that they’re already feeling the pressure from him quitting his 100K job for the current 80K position. Hence he gets mad at her if she ever buys a cup of coffee. This is not going to end well...
OP wants money, money, more money...
Mmm. It sounds like OP doesn’t want to have every $3 purchase micromanaged because the husband doesn’t want to work...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m definitely not a SAHM. I also make more than my husband. I’ve been asking him to see a counselor forever but he’s always so busy with work, he says he doesn’t have the time. He reminds me how little we have when I buy a coffee work or want to sign our kids up for a sport (currently only one is doing one sport). He’s going from $80ks to $60ks.
Have you run the numbers with him? That much of a change will be a significant decrease in your monthly cash flow. It could be $1,000 to $1,200 a month less cash or more. Can you guys afford that?
Note that they’re already feeling the pressure from him quitting his 100K job for the current 80K position. Hence he gets mad at her if she ever buys a cup of coffee. This is not going to end well...
OP wants money, money, more money...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m definitely not a SAHM. I also make more than my husband. I’ve been asking him to see a counselor forever but he’s always so busy with work, he says he doesn’t have the time. He reminds me how little we have when I buy a coffee work or want to sign our kids up for a sport (currently only one is doing one sport). He’s going from $80ks to $60ks.
Have you run the numbers with him? That much of a change will be a significant decrease in your monthly cash flow. It could be $1,000 to $1,200 a month less cash or more. Can you guys afford that?
Note that they’re already feeling the pressure from him quitting his 100K job for the current 80K position. Hence he gets mad at her if she ever buys a cup of coffee. This is not going to end well...
Anonymous wrote:I came to say anxiety but I see PPs have already suggested it. It sounds like he's trying to escape the stress by making changes but the stress is internally generated, which is why it comes back after a while, no matter the new setup. I think he needs a really good cognitive behavioral therapist and possibly meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m definitely not a SAHM. I also make more than my husband. I’ve been asking him to see a counselor forever but he’s always so busy with work, he says he doesn’t have the time. He reminds me how little we have when I buy a coffee work or want to sign our kids up for a sport (currently only one is doing one sport). He’s going from $80ks to $60ks.
Have you run the numbers with him? That much of a change will be a significant decrease in your monthly cash flow. It could be $1,000 to $1,200 a month less cash or more. Can you guys afford that?
Anonymous wrote:I’m definitely not a SAHM. I also make more than my husband. I’ve been asking him to see a counselor forever but he’s always so busy with work, he says he doesn’t have the time. He reminds me how little we have when I buy a coffee work or want to sign our kids up for a sport (currently only one is doing one sport). He’s going from $80ks to $60ks.
Anonymous wrote:"Works in education"
Does that mean he wants to go from being a department head or administrator back to classroom teacher? I can see that. I think that is a legitimate switch to make. Administrators make more but it is more stress and people miss the classroom and working closely with kids.
Anonymous wrote:I’m definitely not a SAHM. I also make more than my husband. I’ve been asking him to see a counselor forever but he’s always so busy with work, he says he doesn’t have the time. He reminds me how little we have when I buy a coffee work or want to sign our kids up for a sport (currently only one is doing one sport). He’s going from $80ks to $60ks.
Anonymous wrote:I’m definitely not a SAHM. I also make more than my husband. I’ve been asking him to see a counselor forever but he’s always so busy with work, he says he doesn’t have the time. He reminds me how little we have when I buy a coffee work or want to sign our kids up for a sport (currently only one is doing one sport). He’s going from $80ks to $60ks.
Anonymous wrote:OP - this was my situation several years ago. DH switched from a higher paying job that he hated to a seemingly lower stress job. I made double what he did even with his higher paying job.
You know what didn't change? His contribution to the household tasks. His stress about our finances, which got worse (e.g., "I saw you bought a Starbucks today..."). His lack of ambition.
You have to gauge whether this change would really make a difference as a net gain because you will be trading work stress for financial stress. Determine whether you can be supportive of this change and what the alternatives might be. The current situation is not sustainable for him clearly, but that is a massive pay cut at that income level.