haha
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Oh darn, just when Firecalc says go! to the 3rd decimal place, one finds out about this.
Ha
Ha
I think before I made any decisions from this article, just like the "net worth" surveys, I'd have to see an auditor's review. Or at least be asked to participate in the research.Oh darn, just when Firecalc says go! to the 3rd decimal place, one finds out about this.
Interesting to read that more women than men claimed they were unfaithful...
It is almost embarrasingly conventional to admit that throughout 23 years of marriage, ending in divorce, I was never unfaithful in any sense of the word. Guess we were not rich enough for that!!
"Divorce itself is a businessman's biggest deal," Felder says. "He's going to lose half he has."
Thank goodness I'm well short of 10 million.
Often people avoid divorce for bad reasons:
- we stay together for the children
"I used to have a problem with being shallow & stupid, but now I make enough money to afford it!"No, it just means that now they can afford to be shallow and stupid...
No, I don't (see below).Do you believe everything you read?
Wow, that's quite a sweeping generalization, without any supporting evidence. I for one am not prepared to simply "trust you" on the issue.Trust me on this: there is a heck of a lot more extra-marital activity among the economically disadvantaged.
Trust me on this: there is a heck of a lot more extra-marital activity among the economically disadvantaged.
Regarding late divorce (in your 60s) - a decision often made when both are relatively active and well, with images of a late life swinger lifestyle, free as birds. Only problem is that those are also the years that bring dependence on others occasionally or permanently, and the best laid plans...
I'm thinking of one couple age 70, mutually agreed to a divorce. He has a stroke 2 years later. She tries to get him back on her health insurance policy, but can't. She cares about him but is involved with another man by then, and he starts getting jealous of all the time she is spending with her poor ex. Boyfriend finally leaves her in frustration. The couple is now a couple again, but no longer married. Kids resent her terribly. He is burning assets waiting to qualify for medicaid, etc. etc. She cries every time his name comes up.
Ugh. I say even if it ain't perfect, do what you can to make it work at that age.
Regarding late divorce (in your 60s) - a decision often made when both are relatively active and well, with images of a late life swinger lifestyle, free as birds. Only problem is that those are also the years that bring dependence on others occasionally or permanently, and the best laid plans...