Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not looking for a meal ticket.
Age: I’m 29 and he’s 30.
Salary: I make base of $180k but can go up to $230k if I work OT. He makes $80k and his salary will not increase.
Outlook: I’m not sure if I would ever stay home but I want the option to take a couple of years off to raise my kids while they’re young.
I grew up in a large family where we didn’t have a lot of extra money. My dad was the sole provider while my mom took care of us. We couldn’t partake in after programs or extra curricular activities because we didn’t have the expendable income to cover it. I had to work 60 hour weeks and delay college so that I could save up and not take out so many student loans. I didn’t finish my degrees until 23 and 27 because of it.
I want to provide my kids with the opportunities I didn’t have. I want them to be able to partake in any activities they want, go on a family vacation, and pay for their college.
I’ve only ever dated men that have matched my salary or made more. It’s a new territory for me.
This problem will work itself out. You're only six years away from a geriatric pregnancy. It doesn't seem likely that you'll find someone that checks all of your boxes before then.
yep - op posts like she's 21-25
She should think about why she's single at nearly 30.
GMAFB. 30 is young.
Not if she wants kids. She's only got 6 years left.
Um, what? I hadn’t even met my dh at 36. Got married at 38, had two kids at 41 and 44. I won’t say it was easy, but op has more than six years left to have children.
You’re lucky it worked out. It’s not super common for women to get married to a decent guy in their late thirties and go on to have children in their forties. It’s amazing that it worked out for you, but it’s more of an exception to the rule.
OP is at an age where if she wants kids, she needs to be getting serious about having the right infrastructure in place to do that.
OP here. I’m 29 and I froze my eggs last year. I think I should be fine on the baby thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Edited
You want to be a stand home mom so yes, you do want a meal ticket.
Accept who you are, dump the good guy, let him find a good girl, and go find you a man who will pay for your life without much in return.
What a cynical outlook! A woman who wants to allow for the possibility of staying home when their children are young is not looking for a meal ticket. The younger generation has been sold a bill of goods that a woman should desire to place her children with another for care 9+ hours per day. Smh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not looking for a meal ticket.
Age: I’m 29 and he’s 30.
Salary: I make base of $180k but can go up to $230k if I work OT. He makes $80k and his salary will not increase.
Outlook: I’m not sure if I would ever stay home but I want the option to take a couple of years off to raise my kids while they’re young.
I grew up in a large family where we didn’t have a lot of extra money. My dad was the sole provider while my mom took care of us. We couldn’t partake in after programs or extra curricular activities because we didn’t have the expendable income to cover it. I had to work 60 hour weeks and delay college so that I could save up and not take out so many student loans. I didn’t finish my degrees until 23 and 27 because of it.
I want to provide my kids with the opportunities I didn’t have. I want them to be able to partake in any activities they want, go on a family vacation, and pay for their college.
I’ve only ever dated men that have matched my salary or made more. It’s a new territory for me.
Then you will need to work or have him be a SAHD. Your mom chose to stay at home and look at how you suffered. By working and being married to the man of your dreams will reap rewards to your future children.
But you really do want a meal ticket, if you are wanting to retire in the next few years and pop out kids. Just admit it and let this man find a woman that will love all of him.
He’s not the man of her dreams though.
It sounds like you’re weirdly invested in gaslighting her into becoming HIS mealticket. If she stays with this guy she’d be the breadwinner and she’d be the default parent carrying all the stress of pregnancy and the mental load of raising a family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not looking for a meal ticket.
Age: I’m 29 and he’s 30.
Salary: I make base of $180k but can go up to $230k if I work OT. He makes $80k and his salary will not increase.
Outlook: I’m not sure if I would ever stay home but I want the option to take a couple of years off to raise my kids while they’re young.
I grew up in a large family where we didn’t have a lot of extra money. My dad was the sole provider while my mom took care of us. We couldn’t partake in after programs or extra curricular activities because we didn’t have the expendable income to cover it. I had to work 60 hour weeks and delay college so that I could save up and not take out so many student loans. I didn’t finish my degrees until 23 and 27 because of it.
I want to provide my kids with the opportunities I didn’t have. I want them to be able to partake in any activities they want, go on a family vacation, and pay for their college.
I’ve only ever dated men that have matched my salary or made more. It’s a new territory for me.
Then you will need to work or have him be a SAHD. Your mom chose to stay at home and look at how you suffered. By working and being married to the man of your dreams will reap rewards to your future children.
But you really do want a meal ticket, if you are wanting to retire in the next few years and pop out kids. Just admit it and let this man find a woman that will love all of him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Edited
You want to be a stand home mom so yes, you do want a meal ticket.
Accept who you are, dump the good guy, let him find a good girl, and go find you a man who will pay for your life without much in return.
What a cynical outlook! A woman who wants to allow for the possibility of staying home when their children are young is not looking for a meal ticket. The younger generation has been sold a bill of goods that a woman should desire to place her children with another for care 9+ hours per day. Smh
Anonymous wrote:Edited
You want to be a stand home mom so yes, you do want a meal ticket.
Accept who you are, dump the good guy, let him find a good girl, and go find you a man who will pay for your life without much in return.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's the thing: OP is stuck - if she marries BF, she will resent him for the rest of her life becacuse he doens't make enough. If she dumps him and marries someone making $400K and lives a life of material wealth, for the rest of her life, she'll pine for her one true love.
Given that OP is so materialistic, she screwed herself over by falling in love.
OP here. I’m not materialistic. I don’t buy fancy things, I don’t own any brand name clothes, and I don’t care about fancy vacations. I do care about living a comfortable life and giving any future children the opportunities I never had.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not looking for a meal ticket.
Age: I’m 29 and he’s 30.
Salary: I make base of $180k but can go up to $230k if I work OT. He makes $80k and his salary will not increase.
Outlook: I’m not sure if I would ever stay home but I want the option to take a couple of years off to raise my kids while they’re young.
I grew up in a large family where we didn’t have a lot of extra money. My dad was the sole provider while my mom took care of us. We couldn’t partake in after programs or extra curricular activities because we didn’t have the expendable income to cover it. I had to work 60 hour weeks and delay college so that I could save up and not take out so many student loans. I didn’t finish my degrees until 23 and 27 because of it.
I want to provide my kids with the opportunities I didn’t have. I want them to be able to partake in any activities they want, go on a family vacation, and pay for their college.
I’ve only ever dated men that have matched my salary or made more. It’s a new territory for me.
This problem will work itself out. You're only six years away from a geriatric pregnancy. It doesn't seem likely that you'll find someone that checks all of your boxes before then.
yep - op posts like she's 21-25
She should think about why she's single at nearly 30.
GMAFB. 30 is young.
Not if she wants kids. She's only got 6 years left.
Um, what? I hadn’t even met my dh at 36. Got married at 38, had two kids at 41 and 44. I won’t say it was easy, but op has more than six years left to have children.
You’re lucky it worked out. It’s not super common for women to get married to a decent guy in their late thirties and go on to have children in their forties. It’s amazing that it worked out for you, but it’s more of an exception to the rule.
OP is at an age where if she wants kids, she needs to be getting serious about having the right infrastructure in place to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not looking for a meal ticket.
Age: I’m 29 and he’s 30.
Salary: I make base of $180k but can go up to $230k if I work OT. He makes $80k and his salary will not increase.
Outlook: I’m not sure if I would ever stay home but I want the option to take a couple of years off to raise my kids while they’re young.
I grew up in a large family where we didn’t have a lot of extra money. My dad was the sole provider while my mom took care of us. We couldn’t partake in after programs or extra curricular activities because we didn’t have the expendable income to cover it. I had to work 60 hour weeks and delay college so that I could save up and not take out so many student loans. I didn’t finish my degrees until 23 and 27 because of it.
I want to provide my kids with the opportunities I didn’t have. I want them to be able to partake in any activities they want, go on a family vacation, and pay for their college.
I’ve only ever dated men that have matched my salary or made more. It’s a new territory for me.
This problem will work itself out. You're only six years away from a geriatric pregnancy. It doesn't seem likely that you'll find someone that checks all of your boxes before then.
yep - op posts like she's 21-25
She should think about why she's single at nearly 30.
GMAFB. 30 is young.
Not if she wants kids. She's only got 6 years left.
Um, what? I hadn’t even met my dh at 36. Got married at 38, had two kids at 41 and 44. I won’t say it was easy, but op has more than six years left to have children.
Anonymous wrote:Op, how do you typically signal your tradwife interests? Why didn’t he pick up on them?
Anonymous wrote:Here's the thing: OP is stuck - if she marries BF, she will resent him for the rest of her life becacuse he doens't make enough. If she dumps him and marries someone making $400K and lives a life of material wealth, for the rest of her life, she'll pine for her one true love.
Given that OP is so materialistic, she screwed herself over by falling in love.
Anonymous wrote:Choose the man that will be an amazing father and husband.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m not looking for a meal ticket.
Age: I’m 29 and he’s 30.
Salary: I make base of $180k but can go up to $230k if I work OT. He makes $80k and his salary will not increase.
Outlook: I’m not sure if I would ever stay home but I want the option to take a couple of years off to raise my kids while they’re young.
I grew up in a large family where we didn’t have a lot of extra money. My dad was the sole provider while my mom took care of us. We couldn’t partake in after programs or extra curricular activities because we didn’t have the expendable income to cover it. I had to work 60 hour weeks and delay college so that I could save up and not take out so many student loans. I didn’t finish my degrees until 23 and 27 because of it.
I want to provide my kids with the opportunities I didn’t have. I want them to be able to partake in any activities they want, go on a family vacation, and pay for their college.
I’ve only ever dated men that have matched my salary or made more. It’s a new territory for me.