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Warning to my daughter: Get your own life. 

Somewhere along the line, I decided that my husband was my financial future. I couldnt have felt more satisfaction or happiness when he graduated law school then if I had done it myself. Yours is mine, and mine is yours, I'll tend to the chickens and you go to town partner.
 
I visualized my future with pride and security. WE worked hard during college, lived cheaply, sacrificed vacations and new furniture. I waitressed. He mowed lawns. We got by. Always though, with a vision. A vision of an easier life.
 
Sometimes, life throws you a curve ball.
 
I hadnt held a real job since our first child. Nearly seven years when we seperated. I worked part time but without any responsibility or awareness. In fact, my name wasnt even on our checking account and my identity was thoroughly entrenched in being a mother and wife.
 
The harsh realities of being responsible for myself and my two children came hard and fast. I lay awake in the new apartment feeling my heartbeat in my chest, reminding myself to breathe. I was giving a house, but in a down market and virtually unsellable, though I was hesitant to sell it anyway, viewing it more as a 401K because the new visions included me being homeless at sixty.
 
He stayed in the house I owned and paid me rent, which covered the new place. We were like amputees learning to walk on our new synthetic limbs.
 
I spent money like someone out of the depression, hissing to my children in Target "Can you believe these prices?!"
 
When I did buy things I felt physically sick.
 
I got a strictly commission job and never trusted anything I made the first six months. Believing it would end the next week or month. Still do. But I was putting something else in the bank that I didnt notice at first: Self esteem. Somehow, through this, I have realized that I can take care of myself. And my children. I can balance my checkbook, buy my groceries, pay my light bills, have a savings even. I have begun to think of goals and believe they are possible.
 
The experience of becoming financial independent after divorce is like education, once it's yours, it can't be taken away.
by Elisabeth  31 Posts 

Posted on 2/1/2008 9:21 AM
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