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SAHM - could you live off this amount of £

777 replies

Livingnearthesea · 28/10/2020 09:11

Name changed. Sorry if this is long but I would appreciate some opinions please on 2 specific questions, so please no judgement about how SAHM should never become financially dependent etc.

I’ve been a SAHM for 5 years and had started to look for a job then Covid hit and local jobs have dried up.

DH does standing order for £200/month to me, and he pays for the gym. Out of that £200/month over the course of a year I need to pay for:
-Clothing and shoes
-Skincare / make up
-Any other personal items

  • Mobile
-Gifts for family and friends (mine) -Prescriptions (need 2-3 per year) -Glasses prescription (varifocal so expensive, now needing new one second year in a row)
  • Hair cuts
-Bus/train fares (don’t drive and we live 30 mins walk to town. I have significant diagnosed foot pain so I can’t always walk far) -Coffee or meal with friends (avoid the latter very often as becomes too expensive) -Taking DC out somewhere by myself so pay for transport, entry fees, lunch etc, or for play dates at a park where everyone else is buying snacks/coffee etc
  • Garden plants & compost etc as DH sees little point in it looking nice
  • DIY items like paint and materials, when I want to upgrade the paint work
  • train to visit my relatives 1-2/year (min fare in advance about £80-100. I’ll now need to pay for DC as he has turned 5 so fares will be much more than stated)
  • Misc

So, over the space of a year would this be enough for you to live off? I never spend money on nice things for myself like new clothing, nails, facials, fashion accessories etc). Over the past 2 years I have unfortunately built up a credit card bill of nearly £900 because I’ve found it hard to meet all expenses.

We have a joint account for the mortgage, all bills, groceries and misc bits and pieces.

Second question which is causing me a moral dilemma- I have just been told that I’ve won £300 in a prize draw that I entered. This would be amazing to put on the CC and make a huge effort to pay it off, but my dilemma is to whether to tell DH?

He earns £110k and comes from a very frugal family. As a result they are all quite wealthy so this £300 is nothing but pocket money to him. For me, this is a wonderful surprise but I know he’d say put it in the joint account and let’s do something nice as a family with it - but we wouldn’t (partly thanks to Covid but he’s also a workaholic and is too tired to do much, hence why I take DC out myself).

I’ve never been a deceitful person but he’s so tight with money sometimes yet only wears designer clothes and suits himself, bought himself a £42k car recently etc and here I am not having had any decent new clothes since I had DC (it you can count £5 t-shirts)- I shop in charity shops only now.

I’m torn. Please believe me when I say I’ve never been a deceitful person, but he would not be happy if I kept this money for myself yet he doesn’t exactly lavish money on me like he does himself (I don’t expect lavish things btw - it would just be nice to be bought a pair of winter boots that suit my bad foot - plantar fasciitis - rather than the cheap shoes I buy that never do).
He does buy me things like jewellery and a rain coat, but he seems to think as a SAHM I don’t need things.

Preparing to be told this financial situation is all my fault Sad

OP posts:
GalaxyCookieCrumble · 28/10/2020 17:47

@Bluntness100 read the thread, are you encouraging her husband to be financially abusive?

KillingOksana1 · 28/10/2020 17:49

He is financially abusing you.

My mum was a SAHM and my dad earned similar to your DP. All money went into joint accounts and was managed by them both. When you give up work to support your spouse that is how it should be. Not the SAHP getting pittance, getting into debt and shopping in charity shops whilst the other has designer clothes and nice cars.

LittleBearPad · 28/10/2020 17:53

@RaspberryCoulis agreed.

Interested in this thread?

Then you might like threads about this subject:

AlwaysLatte · 28/10/2020 18:00

That's crazy, my DH and I pay ourselves £200 a month each and that's just for purely nice-to-haves, personal treats etc - anything to do with the kids, clothing, hair etc comes out of the joint account. I really don't think that is enough for all you mention, and anyway it's false economy to be paying CC interest rather than taking the money out of the right account! How come you're not talking to him about it? 🚩

AlwaysLatte · 28/10/2020 18:01

And fgs just bank the winnings and don't mention it!

Bluntness100 · 28/10/2020 18:01

[quote GalaxyCookieCrumble]@Bluntness100 read the thread, are you encouraging her husband to be financially abusive?[/quote]
Don’t be daft, her husband isn’t even on here.

I’m not encouraging anyone to do anything, but if I was to, I’d tell her to leave or focus on getting a job.

Mallemo · 28/10/2020 18:17

Completely agree that it wouldn’t be the same response on here if the genders were reversed. If my husband decided to give up his work and look after the children and home, making me the sole breadwinner and expecting me to pay all the bills plus give him spending money I would tell him where to go. If we for some reason agreed this in advance, that would be the time to discuss the finances. For all we know, OP just decided she wanted to be a SAHP and he isn’t happy about it at all.

Tiredmum100 · 28/10/2020 18:25

No,I couldn't live off £200 a month. Soeak to your husband and tell him you need more, or get your own job in the future.

Oswin · 28/10/2020 18:29

So the anti sahm posters have decided the op just decided they were not going to work while sticking two fingers to her poor out upon husband. Right.
Where in the op does it allude to this then?

For some parents its extremely important that children have a parent at home in the early years. Some posters are behaving like this isn't a worthy role. It is and it is important .

Flowerpot345 · 28/10/2020 18:42

I totally agree Oswin.

OnlyFoolsnMothers · 28/10/2020 18:51

Love the idea that if the sexes were reversed then MNs response would be different ...why not ask why it’s never the other way round

SleepingStandingUp · 28/10/2020 18:55

Don't tell him and pay it off your CC bill.

Now DC is five can you get a job?

Talk to him about how the money isn't enough.
If he isn't willing to re-evaluate I'd be looking at leaving him tbh

BillMasen · 28/10/2020 19:12

[quote GalaxyCookieCrumble]@BillMasen so in your opinion is financial abuse acceptable in a marriage? [/quote]
Of course not. I thought that was clear but just for the avoidance of doubt, no it is not.

Regularsizedrudy · 28/10/2020 19:13

£200 a month is a pittance when he earns £110k. You are being financially abused.

BillMasen · 28/10/2020 19:15

@Oswin

So the anti sahm posters have decided the op just decided they were not going to work while sticking two fingers to her poor out upon husband. Right. Where in the op does it allude to this then?

For some parents its extremely important that children have a parent at home in the early years. Some posters are behaving like this isn't a worthy role. It is and it is important .

I agree it’s daft to mad up assumptions when you don’t know all the facts.

Just like those assuming he’s abusive, refusing to give any more money and happy to have his wife in rage

Heidyx · 28/10/2020 19:22

This is awful. Please talk to him about this, this isnt doable. I currently work part time but if I wasnt , id be able to claim more in Universal Credit than what your husband is giving you

Anotherlovelybitofsquirrel · 28/10/2020 19:23

I agree with PP. you are being financially abused. £200 is a pittance. Tell him to sort his shit out. You'd get more in maintenance.

Completmentfille · 28/10/2020 20:13

BillMasen

Are you being wilfully goady or do you genuinely think there might be an innocent reason why this man would think the way he is behaving is acceptable unless he was told it wasn't?

BillMasen · 28/10/2020 20:16

@Completmentfille

BillMasen

Are you being wilfully goady or do you genuinely think there might be an innocent reason why this man would think the way he is behaving is acceptable unless he was told it wasn't?

I’m not the only poster advocating communicating rather than walking out. Why are you not challenging and dismissing their opinions...
LittleBearPad · 28/10/2020 20:18

@Completmentfille

BillMasen

Are you being wilfully goady or do you genuinely think there might be an innocent reason why this man would think the way he is behaving is acceptable unless he was told it wasn't?

I think there are. Mainly because some —men— people can be stratospherically dim and do need things pointed out. If they spend £20 on their haircuts, the £50/£80 women’s haircuts cost may be an unknown.

I’m confused as to why OP isn’t just using the joint account or talking to her husband but as they’ve posted and run I imagine we’ll never know.

lostmymitten · 28/10/2020 20:39

Why do people even bother responding to Bluntness? She hangs around like a bad smell (apparently never sleeps) giving shit advice on every thread.

Mummyoflittledragon · 28/10/2020 20:39

@BillMasen
I’ve already explained to you that op is scared in a comment to you. Is that difficult for a man to understand?

BillMasen · 28/10/2020 20:42

[quote Mummyoflittledragon]@BillMasen
I’ve already explained to you that op is scared in a comment to you. Is that difficult for a man to understand?[/quote]
And the sane question to you. I’m not the only poster advocating communicating rather than just leaving. Why are you only insulting me and not them...

LittleBearPad · 28/10/2020 20:43

[quote Mummyoflittledragon]@BillMasen
I’ve already explained to you that op is scared in a comment to you. Is that difficult for a man to understand?[/quote]
You’ve assumed that. The OP hasn’t said it.

Completmentfille · 28/10/2020 21:04

BillMasen

Are you (and others) going to answer my question?

I think there are. Mainly because some —men— people can be stratospherically dim and do need things pointed out. If they spend £20 on their haircuts, the £50/£80 women’s haircuts cost may be an unknown.

What about the fact the OP's husband spends ££ on designer clothes while OP wears charity shop clothes? Or the fact OP is walking round in pain because she can't afford proper shoes? You think he's just too dim to understand that's not ok?