Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you upset because you think your DH is being wasteful with resources and teaching your DC to be the same? Or are you upset because your DH's spending is causing your family financial ruin? If the latter, that's easy, just cut him off (there shouldn't even be an argument about it). If the former, I don't think you get to patrol how he spends his money. Maybe buy him some gym equipment for the house and convince him to cut off his fancy gym membership. That's the only expense I see that would add up. The other expenses don't seem like that big of a deal --- your DH seems to be healthy - maybe ordering the meal with a big drink is the cheaper option and throwing out a big drink means he is not consuming the calories.
Op here. Not financial ruin but we are not able to save much at all. And these little things add up quickly, and then if you add the occasional bigger ticket item here and there, my dh and dc easily sound several thousand a month on extras. It is not nothing.
Okay please post the spending of how it got to several thousand. I think you aren’t amortizing large purchases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Several thousand a month on treats is not reasonable. I like the idea of sitting down with both of them, and do it with a family therapist if you need to, and try to get everyone on the same page.
Is the college fund for your younger child fully funded?
To the PP who said that a $12 smoothie at Jamba Juice after the gym is not a treat: I’m guessing you don’t watch your pennies and did not grow up having to watch your pennies
I’m 100% I grew up poorer than you. And I know that most of financial life is determined by expense like mortgage, education, and health care. Tipping the scale on smoothies is a real edge case — but I’ll wait to see OP monthly expense log and maybe we’ll see someone having a mental breakdown drinking smoothies for every meal…
Anonymous wrote:50 dollars a day times 2 people for ‘extras’ can add up fast
Anonymous wrote:Talk to your payroll department about setting up direct transfers to college savings, 401k, whatever other savings you need, and only the net to your joint checking account. If they are anything like my spendthrift spouse, the only way to get them to stop spending is to run out of money in the checking account.
Anonymous wrote:So my guess is: he is going to get an inheritance that the prenup says you can't touch, but until them he's spending all the money you are earning so you can't build a nest egg to insure against him dumping you when he comes into his inheritance.
Yes, that would make me mad. He has a safety net against frivolous spending that you cannot be sure of for yourself.
Just my guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you upset because you think your DH is being wasteful with resources and teaching your DC to be the same? Or are you upset because your DH's spending is causing your family financial ruin? If the latter, that's easy, just cut him off (there shouldn't even be an argument about it). If the former, I don't think you get to patrol how he spends his money. Maybe buy him some gym equipment for the house and convince him to cut off his fancy gym membership. That's the only expense I see that would add up. The other expenses don't seem like that big of a deal --- your DH seems to be healthy - maybe ordering the meal with a big drink is the cheaper option and throwing out a big drink means he is not consuming the calories.
Op here. Not financial ruin but we are not able to save much at all. And these little things add up quickly, and then if you add the occasional bigger ticket item here and there, my dh and dc easily sound several thousand a month on extras. It is not nothing.
Okay please post the spending of how it got to several thousand. I think you aren’t amortizing large purchases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Several thousand a month on treats is not reasonable. I like the idea of sitting down with both of them, and do it with a family therapist if you need to, and try to get everyone on the same page.
Is the college fund for your younger child fully funded?
To the PP who said that a $12 smoothie at Jamba Juice after the gym is not a treat: I’m guessing you don’t watch your pennies and did not grow up having to watch your pennies
This is a good idea. Ugh. But yes.
No, college for the youngest is NOT fully funded! At least not for all of the potential school options. And I’d much rather dc have more options for college than several years of wasteful spending on garbage.
My dh definitely allots money with love/happiness. His family growing up had extremely dysfunctional spending habits. Feast or famine lifestyle. When they had money, they spent it wildly. I’m sure in his mind, dh thinks he’s conservative because he is not as extreme (think buying a brand new Ferrari during the ‘good’ years, that sort of thing).
You can both affirm how far he’s come and let the numbers show that there’s still more to be learned.
Anonymous wrote:Several thousand a month on treats is not reasonable. I like the idea of sitting down with both of them, and do it with a family therapist if you need to, and try to get everyone on the same page.
Is the college fund for your younger child fully funded?
To the PP who said that a $12 smoothie at Jamba Juice after the gym is not a treat: I’m guessing you don’t watch your pennies and did not grow up having to watch your pennies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you upset because you think your DH is being wasteful with resources and teaching your DC to be the same? Or are you upset because your DH's spending is causing your family financial ruin? If the latter, that's easy, just cut him off (there shouldn't even be an argument about it). If the former, I don't think you get to patrol how he spends his money. Maybe buy him some gym equipment for the house and convince him to cut off his fancy gym membership. That's the only expense I see that would add up. The other expenses don't seem like that big of a deal --- your DH seems to be healthy - maybe ordering the meal with a big drink is the cheaper option and throwing out a big drink means he is not consuming the calories.
Op here. Not financial ruin but we are not able to save much at all. And these little things add up quickly, and then if you add the occasional bigger ticket item here and there, my dh and dc easily sound several thousand a month on extras. It is not nothing.