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Responding to Poor Judgment Dear Margo: This past year has been amazing for me. I successfully passed my first semester in college with a 4.0 while juggling friends and a job. I have a very goal-oriented boyfriend who is compassionate to boot! We have a lot in common and …Read more. If It's Something Dire, You Will Know About It Dear Margo: My husband is an only child in his late 30s. My father-in-law is terribly selfish. We live several states away, and because he's the only blood relative left, my spouse does his best to keep in touch with his father. It is rarely …Read more. What's Up with That? Dear Margo: I really don't know what to do about my mother. It's as though she's made a career out of not listening to what I say ... or she's dedicated herself to doing the opposite. Right after I told her I was going on a diet and staying away …Read more. Guess What: Not Everyone Is Kind Dear Margo: My husband, our children and I recently moved to a new town. Through the children, really, I've met a group of women. They apparently are longtime friends, and one of them invited me to their Wednesday mothers group for lunch. I have to …Read more.
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Marrying For Money Is a Tough Way To Earn a Living

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Dear Margo: I am 27, and I married for love at 24. It didn't work out, so now I'm considering dating for money. I enjoy traveling, which is an expensive hobby, and my passion is animals. Without a degree (or the time and money to pursue a degree), I can only volunteer my time to causes that benefit animals. I'm dating a really great guy right now, but he has a lot of baggage — an ex-wife and two kids, and he can't "take care of me" financially. Kids have always been a deal-breaker for me, but our relationship was very convenient two years ago when I left my husband and was going through my divorce. Is it "wrong" to marry for money if the guy knows ahead of time that it is one of the main reasons I want to be with him? — Gold Digger

Dear Gold: Where to start? It is not "wrong" to marry for money; it is just usually disappointing ... or worse. How much fun can it be, after all, to live like a princess if the guy that goes with it is not someone for whom you have genuine feeling? Some women, however, are so focused on being "taken care of" that they'll put up with anything, and the tradeoff is being a bird in a gilded cage. I also find a serious flaw in your thinking: I don't know that there are men who know for a fact that their money is the main attraction and think that's fine. They may suspect, but I can't imagine it being spelled out. If this is the case, however, then you are in a business arrangement where it's sex and companionship for money, and there is a name for that. — Margo, carefully

On His Way To Being Imelda Marcos

Dear Margo: My husband and I have been married for a year, and we really love each other. We've yet to have kids and are enjoying our newlywed period. My only problem is that I feel he is overly concerned with purchasing nice things.

For example, he focused for months on trading in our current truck for a car by trying to convince me with extensive research, calling dealerships, visiting dealerships, etc. Immediately after that, he focused on getting a pair of designer sunglasses, and now he has just bought another pair of shoes (which, once he gets, he doesn't want to wear often so as not to wear them out).

Sometimes these purchases are quite irrational. He's a huge fan of ordering things online, receiving them, not liking them, and then returning them to then get something else. To be honest, it's exhausting. I find it hard to express myself because I feel he has a difficult time understanding why I don't continually think about my next purchase. Do you think it's merely a difference in shopping habits, or is it a projection of something deeper? — Shopaholic's Wife

Dear Shop: Your luck — this is more often a problem that men have with women. Your husband needs a new hobby, as well as some understanding of why he is a compulsive shopper/buyer. The business with the shoes is edifying. His collection of footwear has nothing to do with wearing shoes, which is necessary, but with having several pairs. In a concerned rather than critical way, I would suggest to him that you believe his concentration on things is based on compulsion rather than need, and that his mental health — not to mention family finances — requires him to join a group or see a counselor to unravel his absorption with buying. (In a perfect world, alas, not the one we're living in, he could become a buyer for a department store and live vicariously.) In any case, do encourage him to get a handle on this. It is one thing to aspire to having nice things and quite another to have that goal become the center of life. — Margo, moderately

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Dear Margo is written by Margo Howard, Ann Landers' daughter. All letters must be sent via e-mail to dearmargo@creators.com. Due to a high volume of e-mail, not all letters will be answered.

COPYRIGHT 2009 MARGO HOWARD

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
The gal hoping to begin dating for money is already taking advantage of a man: "But our relationship was very convenient two years ago when I left my husband and was going through my divorce." Maybe she didn't realize it at the time, but now that she knows and with so little affection for the guy and his "deal breaker" kids, she should let him find someone who actually likes him and spend some time learning how to live relying on herself. She should have done that during the divorce and afterwards in order to think about why she ended up married to someone she divorced and why she had to have a guy get her through it.
Maybe she can use some of that time to figure out how to make herself appealing to the kind of guy (with no kids) who "can take care of her," forgetting about her past need for affection.
Comment: #1
Posted by: BB
Sat Sep 5, 2009 7:43 AM
Whatever happened to women wanting to be financially independent, and not needing some man in order to make their lives okay?
Comment: #2
Posted by: Matt
Sat Sep 5, 2009 10:23 PM
I think that the woman in the first letter is bitter about her divorce and needs counseling! She also needs to put her nose to the grindstone and get a job and/or education!
Comment: #3
Posted by: Paul
Sat Sep 5, 2009 10:25 PM
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