dancingbones
Footballguy
Get married, raise a family, live happily ever after!What was your plan with the first marriage?We plan on spending our lives together, and want our relationship status to reflect that.

Get married, raise a family, live happily ever after!What was your plan with the first marriage?We plan on spending our lives together, and want our relationship status to reflect that.
My less than scientific experience validates your hypothesis.I am glad somebody else brought this up. I was thinking about asking the same questions.Yes, she knows it all - we were friends all through that period of my life (have known her for almost 20 yrs).Just curious - does the new wife-to-be know about the swinging? If so, what was her reaction?I'm now very happily monogamous, so you'll have to rely on Arizona Ron for the exotic tales.I will only consent to this marriage if it yields more exotic tales like you've spun in the past.This place has the memory of an elephant!You're the hedonism dude, yes?
She has no problems that that was how it was, and no question that that is not how she wants it to be.
My less than scientific research tells me that a very high proportion of couples that do the swinging thing end up being divorced a few years later.
So I was wondering if you have seen the same thing? Also, do you think the non-monogamy was a symptom of something wrong with your relationship or was it the actual cause of the problems.
This is also how you described taking a ####.Everyone knows the first one is practice and you really give it a go on the secondWhat was your plan with the first marriage?We plan on spending our lives together, and want our relationship status to reflect that.
Wtf are you talking about?This is also how you described taking a ####. Good luck with your marriage.Everyone knows the first one is practice and you really give it a go on the secondWhat was your plan with the first marriage?We plan on spending our lives together, and want our relationship status to reflect that.
I did not. I would never compare it to a beatiful, cathartic miasma.He said that is also how you described taking a #### and good luck with your marriage.
Yep, agreed. I was trying to avoid shelling out a bunch of cash to set up our finances, but sometimes that is what's needed. At the very least this will give us the opportunity to reexamine how we have everything set up & see what makes sense & what we need going forward. Thanks to all who have chimed in, I appreciate it.You're in MN?
Yankee has given you some very good general info but you really want to consult with a family law attorney in your jurisdiction.
We plan on spending our lives together, and want our relationship to reflect that.....but I'm on a message board asking strangers for advice to cover every single financial pitfall for when we split up. You're talking out of both sides of your mouth, GB.We plan on spending our lives together, and want our relationship status to reflect that.Yeah, this. Why even get married?Why not cohabitate and skip the piece of paper from the state?
Plus, didn't realize what a big deal the news that we were engaged would have on my boys (11 & 14), but they really love the idea of having a step-mom, and it seems to have provided some stability that I think they didn't know was there. So, in short, we're getting married to set ourselves up to spend the rest of our lives together and provide the best family environment for my (our) kids.
In sickness and in health?The high cost of health care—particularly long-term care—can create one big disincentive for older couples to get married. Once you wed, you are responsible for your spouse’s medical debts, says Howard Krooks, a past president of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys. If your spouse ends up in a nursing home, the cost could deplete your estate.
Medicare doesn't cover most nursing home care, and married couples’ combined assets are counted when determining eligibility for Medicaid. The spouse who remains at home is generally allowed to keep a certain amount of “countable assets” (for 2015, spouses can keep up to $119,220) along with certain exempt assets, such as a car. An unmarried partner’s investments, savings and other assets usually aren’t counted at all unless they’re jointly owned
You make double what she makes. Whose estate really needs to be protected here?I picked up the Kiplinger's yesterday, and found this article in it.
The Financial Pros and Cons of Getting Married Later in Life
Some compelling reasons to do a fake marriage, and not as many for getting real married. Problem is that we actually want to be real married! (Not for religious reasons at all - just feel that is the form that fits what we're up to in our lives together).
We'll have to file all of this under "stuff I didn't think about before popping the question".
Interested to hear if there are any FBGs in similar situations & how you have handled it?
Our main concern is not that we'll split up (as referenced by the above poster), but rather that our estates go where we want them to go (and that each person's estate be protected from being bled dry from mandated long term care for the other). Small possibility of that happening, I know - but it is a real concern for us. My grandmother had much of her $$$ used to pay for my grandfather's nursing home care. And my fiance is Canadian - so she already thinks the cost of health care here in the US is ridiculous. Her plan if needing nursing home care would simply be to move back to Canada.