Checklist For Successful Dating Game
To Google or Not to Google?
5 Surprising Ways PTSD Affected My Relationships
Today's Sexual Liberation: Empowerment or a Desperate Cry for Attention?
Love and Relationships of Convenience
Dating Hacks: A Strategy To Extend The Date
In Defense of Men Who Don’t Drink On The First Date
Meeting My Family and Why It Matters Now
Dating Single Mothers and Critiquing Your Woman’s Style
What's Good, Jozen?
Can a Man Worry and Will it Ever Stop?
How To Pour A Woman A Drink In 2025
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Joe says:
May 17, 2011 at 4:06 pm
Being older doesn’t make you automatically understand money just as being young doesn’t make you automatically naive about money. However, I’ve met very few twenty-somethings that really understand money in the context of relationships, especially when it comes to children. They simply don’t see it (especially if you were raised middle class and remember your parents when they were financially stable, not before.)
I was raised by a very money concious father and handled my finances well, yet I was blown away by the financial committment my first child required. Now in my late 40s, I’ve been suprised at how important financial stability has become to me. (And how flippant about money my wife has become at the same time. You can guess the result.)
To Google or Not to Google?
5 Surprising Ways PTSD Affected My Relationships
Today's Sexual Liberation: Empowerment or a Desperate Cry for Attention?
Love and Relationships of Convenience
Dating Hacks: A Strategy To Extend The Date
In Defense of Men Who Don’t Drink On The First Date
Meeting My Family and Why It Matters Now
Dating Single Mothers and Critiquing Your Woman’s Style
What's Good, Jozen?
Can a Man Worry and Will it Ever Stop?
How To Pour A Woman A Drink In 2025
Like or Dislike: Thumb up 5 Thumb down 0
Reply
Joe says:
May 17, 2011 at 4:06 pm
Being older doesn’t make you automatically understand money just as being young doesn’t make you automatically naive about money. However, I’ve met very few twenty-somethings that really understand money in the context of relationships, especially when it comes to children. They simply don’t see it (especially if you were raised middle class and remember your parents when they were financially stable, not before.)
I was raised by a very money concious father and handled my finances well, yet I was blown away by the financial committment my first child required. Now in my late 40s, I’ve been suprised at how important financial stability has become to me. (And how flippant about money my wife has become at the same time. You can guess the result.)