Michelle and crew
I can't believe this might be our last trip to Dis
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2010
- Messages
- 774
Or go to Orlando and play at the pool and other free stuff.
My first thought was that maybe your husband simply doesn't want all of you to tag along with him on a work trip. My husband travels sometimes as well and sometimes he uses those trips as his break from the craziness that is our household. I'm okay with that because I do the same thing when I travel. Maybe he doesn't want the stress and anxiety that goes with having the whole family along on a required work trip. Men often don't know how to tell us those things because we usually don't receive them well.
Well, just my gut reaction is that his flying off the handle probably doesn't have anything to do with the reasons he's giving you. I'm more inclined to agree with the PPs that think he just wants some family-free time. I have a friend that travels quite a bit for work and his convention stories can be pretty wild. When's the last time he's had a boys night out?
I don't think anyone has mentioned this, but could you guys compromise on the vacation. Maybe go to Orlando with him, but do it much cheaper. $3,000 is a lot of money. Perhaps you could just do Sea World or something this trip, you can get really good deals on tickets there, plus if you buy a 1 day ticket you get to go again for free. You could go to Sea World 2 days, hang out at the hotel pool, go to the zoo, ect. And it would be a lot less than $3,000 and still give your family time away.
Just a thought.
Erin
Or go to Orlando and play at the pool and other free stuff.
Well, just my gut reaction is that his flying off the handle probably doesn't have anything to do with the reasons he's giving you. I'm more inclined to agree with the PPs that think he just wants some family-free time. I have a friend that travels quite a bit for work and his convention stories can be pretty wild. When's the last time he's had a boys night out?
I think the issue the OP is having is that she thought they were on the same page, she's doing trip research on a trip she thought they had BOTH agreed on, and out of nowhere he flies off the handle about it.
$3000 would do a lot towards the purchase of a new house.
In the grand scheme of the price it may not, but what about if you need to do 'fix-ups' to the new place...curtains, carpet, appliances and the like. $3K would cover a lot of small things that might need to be done.
It sounds like the 2 of you are on different pages of what you want to do with your money in the next couple of years.
Maybe he just had a bad day?
Maybe you should just ask him. Is there a $ amount that he would be willing to spend on a trip. Maybe you could just do one day at Sea World and a couple of days at Universal and spend others at the pool or something like that. Compromise can be good.
Actually, some of the pp are right; $3000 would be a great amount to put toward your new house; but if I am understanding correctly you are in school and are saying that you will not be able to pay the mortgage payments on a new home until you get out of school and get a job, right? I understand that . I also understand wanting to do things with your kids NOW and not wait until 5 years down the road and you have the house.
Our first discussion about this possible trip involved Sea World, swimming in the pool and staying in a very affordable condo.
Then he just flipped when he saw the numbers. You had talked about a very modest trip, then suddenly you're there showing him expensive ticket prices. You wouldn't show him those ticket prices if you weren't considering buying the tickets and he knows that. Maybe he's thinking, "Darn. I knew this would end up being more than we talked about." Or something along those lines.
But we have a lot of equity, so we have a sizable downpayment ready once we sell our current home (in a very desirable neighborhood where homes still sell for nearly $100000 MORE than what we paid for ours in 2003 - and sell quickly). It's just that we don't have enough income to get to the next level. Even with a sizable down payment, there is no way we could afford a home that is worth moving into (I am not being snobby - I just mean that some homes we have looked at just weren't right for us, and for the money, I would rather stay in my current home - which is fixed up the way I like it - than get the bigger wrong house KWIM?).