cutting off your nose to spite your face helps no one.
“The willingness to accept responsibility for one’s own life is the source from which self-respect springs.” ~Joan Didion
HDBadger, not all assets can be attributed to financially or even physically. The women's big role in the family is also to bear and nurture the child, which takes her off her career and puts her in a disadvantaged position in claiming the career back because of the lost years.
Well it looks like another OP is going to go against the advice of everyone in the thread. I think youve made up your mind. Good luck!!
Why not find a guy who has no assets or money? Or will that not work for you?
Thank you Rowen... The biggest for me to lose is our marriage, and our family intact. If I sign it, it's like signing to a leeway that this might happen and I do not share this value so I'm contemplating now of just going away and maybe I'll have another shot of marriage with a man who shares more my values...
In the eyes of the courts (which is all we are talking about here), yes, contributions are either financial (money, assets) or physical (the kids).
If the woman puts her career on hold, that's a decision she has to deal with. All of the responsible mothers I know were back working soon after giving birth.
Last edited by HDBadger; 17-01-14 at 08:52 AM.
The problem with having one bank account is that if (for whatever reason) your other half decides to rack up credit card debt with a card that is associated with the joint account,(don't need joint signatures for a CC where I'm from anyway) then you too are responsible for that cc debt and it will be divided 50/50 as well should the relationship resolve. Its easy to say that "we would never do that" but desperate people do desperate things... when someone is scorned, more often then not, they react on the scorn rather then BandT's calm dissolving of assets and liablilities.
Adding: Shit happens. Even the most loving and fair relationships can end. There is good reason for both of you to look out for your own interests. Marriage is a business as well as a romantic endevour.
M3rry: What tangible assets will you be bringing into this union? When two people start out even (with nothing or very little) then you can have your entitlement (idealistic) attitude, M3rry. When it starts out unmatched is when you both should be looking out for your future should the relationship dissolve. It's not very romantic but it's certainly practicle and smart. Get your own councel and make sure you are protected should your union end up like 50% (or higher) others and end in divorce. Your lawyer will explain everything to you and will make sure you are looked after in a fair manner...(that current family law is not over-ridden at the very least) should your union dissolve. If his money means more to you then actually trying to be LIFEmates then maybe you shouldn't marry him. Maybe he'd be better off with someone whose love for him is more important then what she'll end up with (up and above what family law dictates) if it ends.
Last edited by Wakeup; 17-01-14 at 08:57 AM.
“The willingness to accept responsibility for one’s own life is the source from which self-respect springs.” ~Joan Didion
I agree with wakeup's post. If both spouses come from similar backgrounds, with similar assets, and earn similar amounts throughout their lives, all of this stuff is much easier.
But, OP, your guy is coming into the marriage with more than you, and, from the sound of it, will make more than you throughout his lifetime. You can slice this up any way you want, but his value IN THE FRAMEWORK OF A LEGAL CONTRACT is substantially more than yours. This isn't about love. It's about the law.
This is why I would never marry a woman who made substantially more or substantially less than me. Issues almost always arise. The OP's man just doesn't want to be screwed, which happens too frequently to men in divorce proceedings.
Finally, I'll just say one thing about the "she got the kids, so she needs more money argument."
That's a fallacious argument, because courts in the U.S. have been historically biased against men in granting custody.
These laws are so biased that states, like Massachusetts, are trying to revamp then.
I believe (assuming both parents are mentally sound and competent) divorced parents should still raise the children equally, and thus we eliminate giving one spouse more money because of the kids.