The husband didn't particularly enjoy playing poker, he was just good at it. It was a job to him. The nice thing was that he "worked" four days a month and was home with his kids the rest of the time.
I think the key is that he considered it a job, and was realistic about it. When he wasn't winning, he just walked away and tried again later.
DH could absolutely do that for a living. He really doesn't enjoy the game, but he can play and read the other players, and whenever he has had the opportunity to play since I've known him, he has won. But he wouldn't just quit his job, move to Vegas, and expect to win a million!
His wife refuses to give up her "lifestyle". I don't even comment anymore.
For anyone who read about my FIL and MIL on page 3, that sounds like my MIL. There's no excuse for FIL's actions throughout his life; a better man would have done differently.
However, my MIL is a dragon. Back in the 60s or 70s (they have always been VERY vague on their timeline, and with her re-makes of her age, along with confusion of her Korean birth certificate of considering a baby to be 1 year at birth AND being born rurally and getting a delayed b.c., plus confusion about when they got married compared to when her first son was born (she was pregnant with another man's baby when they married)...and then found out he was already married so had to REmarry later on but no one will use actual YEARS to describe things.....it's very confusing), he had had an affair, and so she felt she needed jewelry. She picked out a $500 pearl ring at the jewelers, and he went off to buy it. Of course, she either misunderstood or flat-out lied, and it was 5K. 30 or 40 years ago. But her personality is such that, since he had promised her that ring, he really needed to get THAT ring. So he did, and then had to do hinky things to pay for it afterwards.
Her entire jewelry collection is made up of guilt pieces like that. She went DH's whole life telling him that gold and precious stones were an investment, that they will increase in value and it's important to have it....she could sell ONE ring and pay the IRS, but suddenly now it's "all I have left of your father"... (thinking back on that IRS tip thing....oh gosh no I can't do that...it was a phone call I initiated with the IRS that found out he hadn't filed in that long, so I"m already "blamed" for this junk, let alone cause her MORE trouble)
We think a big reason for not paying estimated taxes on his big income was because it would take away from take-home, which would show "failure" to her. Meanwhile, of course, she was *stealing* money from him by hiding it away (and then gave it to her son's partner who truly stole it)...so they both contributed to the lifelong money problems....all while lying to their children about EVERYTHING.
Sorry to go on.
