I tend to be a more middle of the road person when it comes to money. Yes, it is important to save and to have goals but it is also important to live. My mother was a penny pincher and never did anything her entire life but save, save, save. While I respect her commitment I refuse to live like that. I strive for balance. Financial security is important but so are memories with the family and enjoying one's life. Fortunately my husband respects and understands that about me.
Thanks for the replies. I still don't understand what really got him so mad last night, and I plan on talking to him last night.
It's frustrating because we have been talking about considering this trip IF OUR DEBT IS PAID OFF for some time. We actually started talking about it two years ago when it was annouced that his trip would be in Orlando again in 2010. His employer is actually very encouraging for us taking a family vacation along with his trip, so that's not the issue.
My only thought is that DH is feeling down about his job right now. Because of the economy, he's not seen any increases in quite some time. I know, he's lucky to have a job - and we are thankful that he has a good, steady job. But a few months ago, DH was talking to his brother and some friends, and they are all invery different situations - they all make really good money and can afford lots of things that we can't. It's not that DH is jealous of them - he's glad they are in good situations, but he admited to feeling like a bit of a failure because he can't provide more for his family.
We've been talking about moving for a few years, and it just isn't feasable with our income. We have great credit scores and excellent equity in our home, but we just can't qualify for a bigger mortgage unless we have more income.
I am back in school to complete my teaching certification so that I can go back to work when all the kids are in school. It will be nearly 5 years before I can get a job (can only take 2 classes a semester - no summer classes). I work a very part-time job which only really brings in spending money. I think my DH just hates the fact that he can't provide the things he wants to for the family.
In our arguement last night, he kept saying we should take the $3000 we'd spend on a vacation and put it away for a new house. I told him that $3000 really won't make a difference in terms of affording a new house, so I would rather let the kids have some fun while we're still living in the current house.
I think we need to just sit and talk. My DH doesn't fly off the handle too much, so something is going through his mind.
But we do disagree A LOT on the value of family vacations. His family only went on vacation 3 times when he was a child (Disneyland, Grand Canyon, a local beach) - and NOT because they couldn't afford it. They just dodn't do vacations. On the other hand, MY family vacationed every year. Often it was to Disney - or Orlando attractions. But other times we'd just go to Washington DC and enjoy the free monuments and museums, or go to the beach, or explore a city within a few hours of our home. But we always did something - and those are huge memories for me and my family.
BTW - in discussing a possible ORlando vacation for this summer, we've talked about inviting HIS parents with us for the week too. So we've really spent time thinking about this - it's not just my idea by any means.
Hopefully I'll have a better idea of what's going on tonight. I was just really frustrated by his reaction last night and needed to vent.
$3000 is a lot of money towards a new house. Its possible he is thinking much longer term. But if you spend $3000 every year for Disney for the next five years - the time before you are working full time - that's $15,000 towards the downpayment.
We never had much money growing up either. And we lived away from family, so vacations were always to visit my grandparents. I still have great memories - they don't include Disney trips - they include fishing off the dock at a friend's cabin, baking cookies with my mom, the day trips we took to museums. Weekends in Duluth. A day spent on borrowed snowshoes or someone's jetski.
I have to live in my house every day. It needs to be a house I'm happy in every day. Vacation, those are experiences I live in short term. They are really nice, but if I have to choose between vacation and a house I'm happy with, I'd be saving for the house.
Vacations are nice, but Disney World is not necessary to create memories with your children.
The real issue here is communication. He may well be standing around the coffee pot saying, "My wife just doesn't get it. I'm so frustrated with her. Doesn't she see that we just splurged on Disney trips . . . now it's time to get serious about paying off that credit card debt and save for the new house!"I am so frustrated with my DH tonight.
I do agree with this. It may be that having the family on his last trip was more difficult than he's admitted to you -- and you've said you absolutely don't want to cause any problems with his job.I would definitely take his lead. For whatever reason, he does not want the family on this business trip.
Do you understand that by saying how you need to have vacations while your kids are young, to make good memories, you are in a way devaluing your husband's family, because they didn't take vacations for whatever reason.
Maybe his reaction is an instinctive "I didn't have vacations and I turned out fine" type of thing.
Especially if your husband's parents are aging and if he is having some guilt over not appreciating them enough. That is really the point, it seems, when you realize that your parents are mortal and were just doing the best they could, when the little conversational barbs really hurt - even when they aren't meant to.
It's frustrating because we have been talking about considering this trip IF OUR DEBT IS PAID OFF for some time. We actually started talking about it two years ago when it was annouced that his trip would be in Orlando again in 2010.
In our arguement last night, he kept saying we should take the $3000 we'd spend on a vacation and put it away for a new house. I told him that $3000 really won't make a difference in terms of affording a new house, so I would rather let the kids have some fun while we're still living in the current house.
I think we need to just sit and talk. My DH doesn't fly off the handle too much, so something is going through his mind.
But we do disagree A LOT on the value of family vacations. His family only went on vacation 3 times when he was a child (Disneyland, Grand Canyon, a local beach) - and NOT because they couldn't afford it. They just dodn't do vacations. On the other hand, MY family vacationed every year. Often it was to Disney - or Orlando attractions. But other times we'd just go to Washington DC and enjoy the free monuments and museums, or go to the beach, or explore a city within a few hours of our home. But we always did something - and those are huge memories for me and my family.