Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always made less money than my husband, but I was a better investor, and always saved more (before we married and after). I have more money in my IRA accounts than he does.
It doesn't matter to me because we've been married for a while and we each have our strengths. MIL has no clue about our finances, but maybe she complains to her friends that I'm not her son's financial equal!
Having less money is one thing. Not having career goals to be able to stand on your own two feet is another.
Raising a family is a career.
+100
Loving children into responsible adults is a very meaningful and important career.
Anonymous wrote:Also wish posters would stop acting like being lazy is a precursor to being a SAHM. The best SAHM are the ones who aren't and have never been lazy.
Anonymous wrote:My friend who made well over 550K a year when single only wanted to date women no career who would to be a great Mom.
He married a nice girl who worked in a department store who did go to college.
They live in a mansion and have three great looking kids. He had plenty of cash. He just needed someone to be there to run house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend who made well over 550K a year when single only wanted to date women no career who would to be a great Mom.
He married a nice girl who worked in a department store who did go to college.
They live in a mansion and have three great looking kids. He had plenty of cash. He just needed someone to be there to run house.
How 1950!
So he was not seeking a partner or equal, he was seeking a housekeeper/nanny?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend who made well over 550K a year when single only wanted to date women no career who would to be a great Mom.
He married a nice girl who worked in a department store who did go to college.
They live in a mansion and have three great looking kids. He had plenty of cash. He just needed someone to be there to run house.
How 1950!
So he was not seeking a partner or equal, he was seeking a housekeeper/nanny?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I was your future DIL.
My MIL openly criticized every choice I had ever made; from employment, to volunteering to choosing to be a SAHM, to not renovating our house.
Over 20 years later and 4DC, I have no relationship with my MIL. I went gray rock as she was so intrusive and toxic.
What my MIL doesn’t know is that I inherited a life-changing amount of money and sold a rental I’ve owned for a long time.
I don’t know this is as much about wanting your child to marry some trust fund/inheritance heiress as it is wanting your child to be evenly matched with a spouse with some ambition and industry with whom they will build a life. Don’t get me wrong, money is better than no money, but it is something different when you’ve built it together through hard work and shared sacrifice vs hitting the lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always made less money than my husband, but I was a better investor, and always saved more (before we married and after). I have more money in my IRA accounts than he does.
It doesn't matter to me because we've been married for a while and we each have our strengths. MIL has no clue about our finances, but maybe she complains to her friends that I'm not her son's financial equal!
Having less money is one thing. Not having career goals to be able to stand on your own two feet is another.
Raising a family is a career.
Its a role and responsiblity but not a career.
Most people who work have just a job and not a career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always made less money than my husband, but I was a better investor, and always saved more (before we married and after). I have more money in my IRA accounts than he does.
It doesn't matter to me because we've been married for a while and we each have our strengths. MIL has no clue about our finances, but maybe she complains to her friends that I'm not her son's financial equal!
Having less money is one thing. Not having career goals to be able to stand on your own two feet is another.
Raising a family is a career.
Its a role and responsiblity but not a career.
Anonymous wrote:If she cooks and cleans and exercises and volunteers and is good with babies and kids, she'll make a great SAHM.
If she does a lot of makeup and dress up and partying and ordering takeout and keeps her home sloppy, then she's a rental.
Anonymous wrote:My friend who made well over 550K a year when single only wanted to date women no career who would to be a great Mom.
He married a nice girl who worked in a department store who did go to college.
They live in a mansion and have three great looking kids. He had plenty of cash. He just needed someone to be there to run house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always made less money than my husband, but I was a better investor, and always saved more (before we married and after). I have more money in my IRA accounts than he does.
It doesn't matter to me because we've been married for a while and we each have our strengths. MIL has no clue about our finances, but maybe she complains to her friends that I'm not her son's financial equal!
Having less money is one thing. Not having career goals to be able to stand on your own two feet is another.
Raising a family is a career.
+100
Loving children into responsible adults is a very meaningful and important career.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I was your future DIL.
My MIL openly criticized every choice I had ever made; from employment, to volunteering to choosing to be a SAHM, to not renovating our house.
Over 20 years later and 4DC, I have no relationship with my MIL. I went gray rock as she was so intrusive and toxic.
What my MIL doesn’t know is that I inherited a life-changing amount of money and sold a rental I’ve owned for a long time.