"April Masini answers questions no one else can and tells you the truth that no one else will."
"April Masini answers questions no one else can
and tells you the truth that no one else will."

Financial Indpependence

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  • #5793
    NerdGirl11
    Member #150,779

    Dear April,

    Just a quick note, I have posted here before but this post is in reference to different relationship than the first one.

    My boyfriend and I have been together nearly 10 months. I am a graduate student, he’s finishing undergrad. We’re both the sane age (in our early 20s). We met while studying abroad and hit it off. He is the most wonderful boyfriend. I couldn’t ask for better. However, now that we’re both back in the US, I’m noticing something that slightly concerns me. My boyfriend has never had a job. He’s a 5th year undergrad by choice. His parents encouraged him to triple major, and they pay for everything. And when I say everything, I mean pretty much anything he wants. They’re not rich, but they are comfortable enough. He’s been abroad 5 times over the five years he’s been in college, he has all the latest technology (iphone, ipad, etc), and as much spending money as needed. I, on the other hand, have worked every single summer since I was in high school. I pay for 95% of my own living expenses, and I have a vehicle that I bought myself. I am careful with my spending, while he doesn’t really know what it means to go without. He means well, but he’s never experienced the typical “crappy summer job” that everyone else does during college. When it comes time to buy each other gifts, I find myself getting annoyed because I work hard to afford something nice, and he just uses his parents money. He often wants to go on vacations/day trips, but it’s not always possible for me. Plus, he doesn’t have a car and can only use his parents’ when they let him. This makes transportation an issue when we want to see each other. There are times when he just can’t relate to the stresses associated with balancing a checkbook. Although I care deeply about him, sometimes it’s hard not to feel like we live very differently.

    Now that he’s going to grad school, his parents told him they’d foot his living expenses so he could focus on his studies. They’re renting a one bedroom for him so he won’t have to have a roommate. He wants to move in together eventually, but I don’t want to split rent on a place that he’s not paying for himself. Even at present, we can’t really make any decisions as a couple (ie, visiting friends an hour away, going out to a nice dinner) without him having to ask his parents if he can have the money to do so. As a result, they know about pretty much every move we make. They’re very very nice, but he relies on them a lot. He says that it shouldn’t matter that they support him, but I just feel like we should be equal financial footing if we were to live together.

    I’ve discussed this with him, and he always says that he plans to get a job sometime in the next year or two after grad school. He wants a very specific type of job in his field. Sometimes I just worry that his parents have spent so much time shielding him from financial stress that we’re sort of on two different levels of adult life. Should I just accept him as is, or is this a sign that he has no desire to be Independent?

    #26523
    AskApril Masini
    Keymaster

    Since this is still about you, please post this as a reply to the other string of posts you have here. I’ll look out for your reply and answer you there! Thank you! It’s really very helpful to have everything about you in one place. Sometimes there are patterns that you don’t see, that carry with you from one relationship to the next — but I will. 😉 It would be very helpful if you’d do this.

    Check out my new FB Fan Page!! And If the advice you found on AskApril.com was helpful “like” me — and tell a friend!
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