Originally Posted by
HDBadger
I think smackie9 is dead on. It's easy for the person who has fewer assets and who makes less money to say, "Well, I gave a lot to the relationship, too, so I deserve at least half," even when that person didn't make nearly the same amount of money as his/her partner did and didn't have nearly as much to show for a lifetime of work.
It's very simple: A prenup protects everyone. OP, if he comes into the relationship with significantly more assets than you do, he gets to keep those assets if you divorce. If he makes, for example, three-quarters of the money in the relationship, then he deserves three-quarters of the money if you divorce.
Marriage *is* a legal contract. It should be treated as such. If you have any problem with signing a prenup that gives back to each individual party what he or she earned over the course of the relationship, my bet is you don't really want a mutual relationship; you want someone to completely take care of you financially.
And no, you don't get "paid" for washing dishes and doing laundry. Marriage is a legally binding contract. It is not your employer.
This is one of the favourite whines I hear from men who haven't taken into account just what their partner has contributed with their "lesser" income. When you think about all the groceries, their contribution to the bills and mortgage, all the gifts bought for his side of the family as well as your own, her share of entertainment, medical benefits, etc etc etc. Then "half of everything" isn't so hard to accept. Now, if you married a trophy wife that does nothing to contribute but rather just spends then that's your fault for doing it without protecting yourself.
how do you explain so many women running off with way more than 50 percent, even when they didn't earn nearly that much?
see paragraph about the woman's contributions even though she didn't make as much as her counterpart.
I'd like to see some stats on "women running off with way more than 50 percent." While keeping in mind what Vashti noted regarding child support.
Anyway: If you own a home and are going to be shacking up or marrying someone then its in your own best interests to sell that property and buy a new one together. Or, buy a new one together and keep your own home and rent it out. Protect yourselves. Prenups are put in place for both parties and that's why its important to have your own legal councel and not be using your partners team to negotiate for you.
Last edited by Wakeup; 17-01-14 at 07:13 AM.
“The willingness to accept responsibility for one’s own life is the source from which self-respect springs.” ~Joan Didion