Anonymous wrote:OP, the first thing to remember is that you can only control your behavior not others, including your spouse and children.
My husband has and engineering degree from the top two universities in his field. He works for a nonprofit in a job he loves. I wasted way too many years being frustrated with him. I decided I was the one who wanted the extra money so it was my responsibility to earn it. I now make about $500k a year including bonus and options and we have the lifestyle I want (my husband still doesn't care).
Contr your own behavior because it is the only thing you can control!
Anonymous wrote:OP, stop griping. My husband graduated near the top of the top school for his profession. He works at one of the places that pays a bunch of money. He works around the clock and is totally miserable and in a bad mood all the time. Is that what you want? I'd love for him to be in government and be satisfied with his work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My guess is that the DH is in the govt making 110-150, which in addition to her salary affords them a perfectly nice middle class life. Yet now that the kids are getting older, college is looming, and she wants to consider private school - she's realizing it isn't all that easy and would be much easier if her DH would bring home 250k+ by himself like so many of his classmates.
In general I agree w DH - you got the damn degree that she helped pay for, now use it. Doesn't matter if it won't make happy to be in the rat race - he can deal for 10 yrs, sock away cash and then go back to his cushy job. And yes I'd say the same if the situation was reversed and it was the wife wasting away earnings potential; I know of a similar situation where the wife is an MD and just does not want to work - she barely wants to work part time and wants the DH to provide, which he does yet just given their career choices, he doesn't have the same earnings potential in engineering that she does in medicine.
Disagree. Having a good degree doesn't mean you should be forced into a soul crushing job. Sounds like OP thought she would have it easy after he got his degree and is disappointed that her Meal ticket doesn't make more money.
Anonymous wrote:The grass is always greener. DCUM double-standards are apparent:
Wife: "He has no ambition and did not live up to his potential or the expectations I had for him"
Posters: "Totally empathize, I absolutely despise beta losers who make less than $425k/year and can't give their spouse the option to be a SAHM with housekeepers and a RR in the driveway".
In comparison:
Husband: "She has no ambition and did not live up to her potential or the expectations I had for her"
Posters: "She does not work to serve you, you self-centered chauvinistic loser. She has every right to work a job that makes her happy and gives her a good work-life balance".
Anonymous wrote:I have not read all the previous comments, but my first thought is that anyone who marries someone and considers his experience his “pedigree” is probably not going to be happy regardless of HHI.
Anonymous wrote:My guess is that the DH is in the govt making 110-150, which in addition to her salary affords them a perfectly nice middle class life. Yet now that the kids are getting older, college is looming, and she wants to consider private school - she's realizing it isn't all that easy and would be much easier if her DH would bring home 250k+ by himself like so many of his classmates.
In general I agree w DH - you got the damn degree that she helped pay for, now use it. Doesn't matter if it won't make happy to be in the rat race - he can deal for 10 yrs, sock away cash and then go back to his cushy job. And yes I'd say the same if the situation was reversed and it was the wife wasting away earnings potential; I know of a similar situation where the wife is an MD and just does not want to work - she barely wants to work part time and wants the DH to provide, which he does yet just given their career choices, he doesn't have the same earnings potential in engineering that she does in medicine.