Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD accepted ED to Cornell. My ex refuses to pay for DD college. What are my options besides her taking out loans?
why don't you pay? what is the issue here?
Perhaps mom can’t afford it alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD accepted ED to Cornell. My ex refuses to pay for DD college. What are my options besides her taking out loans?
why don't you pay? what is the issue here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's me, but feels like there are one or more men's right activists in this thread with all the references to men being bamboozled, etc. When they became dads did they just think it was going to be all shits and giggles?
Men want to be involved and consulted. In this case Mom made all the decisions and demands Dad pay for it. He is not under any obligation to pay and he may not be able to afford it. He makes slightly more than mom. He probably pays child support which would make it less for dad and more for mom. Mom cannot afford it. One could conclude neither can dad. Mom promised child an expensive education that neither parent can swing.
How do you know any of this? and finally, the dad SIGNED the FAFSA form. He also had a chance to ask questions and explain his plans. It's not a one way street. Did he think that his daughter was never going to become college age?
We don't know the entire situation. Signing the form and discussing it are two different things. He may have assumed daughter would get financial aid. When she didn't, mom got mad and expects Dad to pay. Why isn't mom paying for any of it?
No it is not "two different things." When the dad signed the form, if not earlier, he should have a conversation with his HS senior, who is clearly a strong student, about what, if any, obligations he felt had for her college. Even if the dad assumed that the daughter would get financial aid, he should have still had a conversation.
How is it so hard to understand how to be a good parent?
Anonymous wrote:DD accepted ED to Cornell. My ex refuses to pay for DD college. What are my options besides her taking out loans?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's me, but feels like there are one or more men's right activists in this thread with all the references to men being bamboozled, etc. When they became dads did they just think it was going to be all shits and giggles?
Men want to be involved and consulted. In this case Mom made all the decisions and demands Dad pay for it. He is not under any obligation to pay and he may not be able to afford it. He makes slightly more than mom. He probably pays child support which would make it less for dad and more for mom. Mom cannot afford it. One could conclude neither can dad. Mom promised child an expensive education that neither parent can swing.
How do you know any of this? and finally, the dad SIGNED the FAFSA form. He also had a chance to ask questions and explain his plans. It's not a one way street. Did he think that his daughter was never going to become college age?
We don't know the entire situation. Signing the form and discussing it are two different things. He may have assumed daughter would get financial aid. When she didn't, mom got mad and expects Dad to pay. Why isn't mom paying for any of it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's me, but feels like there are one or more men's right activists in this thread with all the references to men being bamboozled, etc. When they became dads did they just think it was going to be all shits and giggles?
Men want to be involved and consulted. In this case Mom made all the decisions and demands Dad pay for it. He is not under any obligation to pay and he may not be able to afford it. He makes slightly more than mom. He probably pays child support which would make it less for dad and more for mom. Mom cannot afford it. One could conclude neither can dad. Mom promised child an expensive education that neither parent can swing.
How do you know any of this? and finally, the dad SIGNED the FAFSA form. He also had a chance to ask questions and explain his plans. It's not a one way street. Did he think that his daughter was never going to become college age?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are not obligated to pay for college
Kid is adult after 18
Parents are not obligated to pay for college. A good parent has a conversation with their kid, especially one who is on a college track and a very competitive one in this instance, about what they will/will not be paying for in re college. My parents, blue collar workers, told me when I was nine or ten, that they would not be paying for college. (As I got older, I realized what they really meant was "we can't afford to pay for college because we don't always have money to get through the end of the week.") I school shopped accordingly.
I don't think a kid who grew up in what sounds like UMC conditions and has one parent rolling in the dough made an unreasonable conjecture that there would be money for college IF the parent never had a conversation with the kid about it. Again, I don't think the dad is obligated to pay, but he is obligated to be a parent and he really failed here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's me, but feels like there are one or more men's right activists in this thread with all the references to men being bamboozled, etc. When they became dads did they just think it was going to be all shits and giggles?
Men want to be involved and consulted. In this case Mom made all the decisions and demands Dad pay for it. He is not under any obligation to pay and he may not be able to afford it. He makes slightly more than mom. He probably pays child support which would make it less for dad and more for mom. Mom cannot afford it. One could conclude neither can dad. Mom promised child an expensive education that neither parent can swing.
Anonymous wrote:You should have negotiated he'd pay at least 50% in your custody agreement.
I find it really weird that you let her apply to schools you had no plan for paying for.
Anonymous wrote:DD accepted ED to Cornell. My ex refuses to pay for DD college. What are my options besides her taking out loans?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's me, but feels like there are one or more men's right activists in this thread with all the references to men being bamboozled, etc. When they became dads did they just think it was going to be all shits and giggles?
Anonymous wrote:Parents are not obligated to pay for college
Kid is adult after 18