Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's ulcer-inducing and horrific, in the cases I know personally. The two people I know ended up divorced, with kids who barely knew them, hating their jobs, working to retire early, then retired single and estranged from their children, after putting in time at a job they loathed. Money was GREAT but the actual life was...not great. I say this as someone who wishes I had more money a LOT but truly? Not in that field
You are exaggerating out of jealousy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I go on vacation by myself with kids, scheduled C-sections at the end of the day, and never had a honeymoon.
hard life....want some cheese?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse of big law partner here.
DH makes close to 2M. There has been one night in the last 6 months he wasn't home in time for dinner and bedtime. Oldest kid plays travel soccer, and he goes to every game (I don't - not my thing). He also coaches younger kid's sports team, so obviously attends / leads every weekday practice and every weekend game. The two of us have date night weekly, and usually spend an hour together every night after the kids are in bed. Then he does another 90 minutes of work while I read next to him.
Overall he works around 50-60 hours a week max. He's highly efficient and very smart (HYP educated), and he's also good at client relationships and managing other lawyers, so he brings in a lot since he takes a cut of the entire client bill - in other words, the hours of those he manages, not just his own hours. Working the longest hours is not always correlated with bringing in the most money.
I know it's tempting to believe that those with more money must somehow be miserable, but it's not always true.
I find it extraordinarily hard to believe that he wasn’t home only once for dinner in the last six months. I can’t think of a single Biglaw partner in the United States of America who can make that claim. Other than that, sure.
Pp here.
If it’s so hard to believe, I just don’t think you know that many big law partners. Or at least equity partners. DH works hard but if he wants to be home for dinner, he can be home for dinner. Same is true for every other equity partner we know.
Anonymous wrote:It's ulcer-inducing and horrific, in the cases I know personally. The two people I know ended up divorced, with kids who barely knew them, hating their jobs, working to retire early, then retired single and estranged from their children, after putting in time at a job they loathed. Money was GREAT but the actual life was...not great. I say this as someone who wishes I had more money a LOT but truly? Not in that field
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much money does a typical Biglaw partner in a top 10 or 20 law firm in DC bring home in a month? I keep asking and nobody tells me. Am I right that it’s like $200,000 a month?
It can be anywhere from 50k to $1M a month. Probably the vast majority clustered around $100k-$200k.
Pre-tax.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't work. Kids have everything they need, and I don't think about money. Plus, I think marriage is easier when money is not an issue. But you have to be ok with someone who works a lot, and you have to take care of every detail in your life - kind of like being a single parent - because the other person works more than anyone else you'll ever meet.
It is nothing like being a single parent.
It's "like being a single parent without any financial concerns"
It's still not like being a single parent. You have a partner with whom you can plan for the future, presumably, he is at least occasionally around for games/shows/parent-teacher night at school, there is another adult living in your house so you can do little things like take your dog for a walk or run to the store while the kids are sleeping. Come on!
I actually had a friend who had to quit coming to Orange Theory with me because the class was at 7pm and her BigLaw DH couldn't be home early enough one night a week for her to go to the class. He might be home by then sometimes, but he couldn't guarantee it. She suggested getting a sitter but he rolled his eyes at her and said it was ridiculous to hire a sitter once a week so that she could go spend money on a workout class, when she could just work out at home after she'd fed the kids and put them to bed.
That's not every BigLaw spouse, but it's a not insignificant percent of them. It's not the same as being a single parent. In some ways, it's worse.
Anonymous wrote:How much money does a typical Biglaw partner in a top 10 or 20 law firm in DC bring home in a month? I keep asking and nobody tells me. Am I right that it’s like $200,000 a month?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse of big law partner here.
DH makes close to 2M. There has been one night in the last 6 months he wasn't home in time for dinner and bedtime. Oldest kid plays travel soccer, and he goes to every game (I don't - not my thing). He also coaches younger kid's sports team, so obviously attends / leads every weekday practice and every weekend game. The two of us have date night weekly, and usually spend an hour together every night after the kids are in bed. Then he does another 90 minutes of work while I read next to him.
Overall he works around 50-60 hours a week max. He's highly efficient and very smart (HYP educated), and he's also good at client relationships and managing other lawyers, so he brings in a lot since he takes a cut of the entire client bill - in other words, the hours of those he manages, not just his own hours. Working the longest hours is not always correlated with bringing in the most money.
I know it's tempting to believe that those with more money must somehow be miserable, but it's not always true.
I find it extraordinarily hard to believe that he wasn’t home only once for dinner in the last six months. I can’t think of a single Biglaw partner in the United States of America who can make that claim. Other than that, sure.
Pp here.
If it’s so hard to believe, I just don’t think you know that many big law partners. Or at least equity partners. DH works hard but if he wants to be home for dinner, he can be home for dinner. Same is true for every other equity partner we know.
Ok, and what about the 15+ years before now, when he was an associate or non-equity partner? You're glossing over the 70 hour weeks, all-nighters and travel required for years to get to that point. No BigLaw partner just coasts along working 40 hours per week until they make equity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse of big law partner here.
DH makes close to 2M. There has been one night in the last 6 months he wasn't home in time for dinner and bedtime. Oldest kid plays travel soccer, and he goes to every game (I don't - not my thing). He also coaches younger kid's sports team, so obviously attends / leads every weekday practice and every weekend game. The two of us have date night weekly, and usually spend an hour together every night after the kids are in bed. Then he does another 90 minutes of work while I read next to him.
Overall he works around 50-60 hours a week max. He's highly efficient and very smart (HYP educated), and he's also good at client relationships and managing other lawyers, so he brings in a lot since he takes a cut of the entire client bill - in other words, the hours of those he manages, not just his own hours. Working the longest hours is not always correlated with bringing in the most money.
I know it's tempting to believe that those with more money must somehow be miserable, but it's not always true.
I find it extraordinarily hard to believe that he wasn’t home only once for dinner in the last six months. I can’t think of a single Biglaw partner in the United States of America who can make that claim. Other than that, sure.
Pp here.
If it’s so hard to believe, I just don’t think you know that many big law partners. Or at least equity partners. DH works hard but if he wants to be home for dinner, he can be home for dinner. Same is true for every other equity partner we know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse of big law partner here.
DH makes close to 2M. There has been one night in the last 6 months he wasn't home in time for dinner and bedtime. Oldest kid plays travel soccer, and he goes to every game (I don't - not my thing). He also coaches younger kid's sports team, so obviously attends / leads every weekday practice and every weekend game. The two of us have date night weekly, and usually spend an hour together every night after the kids are in bed. Then he does another 90 minutes of work while I read next to him.
Overall he works around 50-60 hours a week max. He's highly efficient and very smart (HYP educated), and he's also good at client relationships and managing other lawyers, so he brings in a lot since he takes a cut of the entire client bill - in other words, the hours of those he manages, not just his own hours. Working the longest hours is not always correlated with bringing in the most money.
I know it's tempting to believe that those with more money must somehow be miserable, but it's not always true.
I find it extraordinarily hard to believe that he wasn’t home only once for dinner in the last six months. I can’t think of a single Biglaw partner in the United States of America who can make that claim. Other than that, sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse of big law partner here.
DH makes close to 2M. There has been one night in the last 6 months he wasn't home in time for dinner and bedtime. Oldest kid plays travel soccer, and he goes to every game (I don't - not my thing). He also coaches younger kid's sports team, so obviously attends / leads every weekday practice and every weekend game. The two of us have date night weekly, and usually spend an hour together every night after the kids are in bed. Then he does another 90 minutes of work while I read next to him.
Overall he works around 50-60 hours a week max. He's highly efficient and very smart (HYP educated), and he's also good at client relationships and managing other lawyers, so he brings in a lot since he takes a cut of the entire client bill - in other words, the hours of those he manages, not just his own hours. Working the longest hours is not always correlated with bringing in the most money.
I know it's tempting to believe that those with more money must somehow be miserable, but it's not always true.
I find it extraordinarily hard to believe that he wasn’t home only once for dinner in the last six months. I can’t think of a single Biglaw partner in the United States of America who can make that claim. Other than that, sure.
Pp here.
If it’s so hard to believe, I just don’t think you know that many big law partners. Or at least equity partners. DH works hard but if he wants to be home for dinner, he can be home for dinner. Same is true for every other equity partner we know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse of big law partner here.
DH makes close to 2M. There has been one night in the last 6 months he wasn't home in time for dinner and bedtime. Oldest kid plays travel soccer, and he goes to every game (I don't - not my thing). He also coaches younger kid's sports team, so obviously attends / leads every weekday practice and every weekend game. The two of us have date night weekly, and usually spend an hour together every night after the kids are in bed. Then he does another 90 minutes of work while I read next to him.
Overall he works around 50-60 hours a week max. He's highly efficient and very smart (HYP educated), and he's also good at client relationships and managing other lawyers, so he brings in a lot since he takes a cut of the entire client bill - in other words, the hours of those he manages, not just his own hours. Working the longest hours is not always correlated with bringing in the most money.
I know it's tempting to believe that those with more money must somehow be miserable, but it's not always true.
I find it extraordinarily hard to believe that he wasn’t home only once for dinner in the last six months. I can’t think of a single Biglaw partner in the United States of America who can make that claim. Other than that, sure.
Anonymous wrote:Spouse of big law partner here.
DH makes close to 2M. There has been one night in the last 6 months he wasn't home in time for dinner and bedtime. Oldest kid plays travel soccer, and he goes to every game (I don't - not my thing). He also coaches younger kid's sports team, so obviously attends / leads every weekday practice and every weekend game. The two of us have date night weekly, and usually spend an hour together every night after the kids are in bed. Then he does another 90 minutes of work while I read next to him.
Overall he works around 50-60 hours a week max. He's highly efficient and very smart (HYP educated), and he's also good at client relationships and managing other lawyers, so he brings in a lot since he takes a cut of the entire client bill - in other words, the hours of those he manages, not just his own hours. Working the longest hours is not always correlated with bringing in the most money.
I know it's tempting to believe that those with more money must somehow be miserable, but it's not always true.