

#NOT MY LOGO DONT FINE ME HOW TO#
It will be your best guide on how to proceed. Assuming you keep your home and have a tenant, it’s fair for you to pay a set amount every month toward rent in your boyfriend’s home, but if that feels weird or creates a low status/high status situation in your relationship, or doesn’t feel right to you, listen to your gut.

That’s not a good outcome for you or your child. If you do stay together, you and your children will be living in his home. If this relationship does not work out and you sell your home, you will be in a tricky situation and you will rue the day you ever sold it. I’ll leave the relationship to you, but I urge you not to give up your financial independence and your home. But I got NO stimulus check - what can I do? The Moneyist: I filed a joint tax return with my estranged wife because she is a gambler and her finances are a mess. Don’t sell this home unless you absolutely have to, and I see no reason in your letter why you should sell to move in with a man who does not wish to buy a home together, especially given that you are planning to have children together.

Your letter stopped me in my tracks here: “I will be selling my current home to move with him.” Stop. Does it make sense to take my current home profits after the sale and put it in a separate money making account for the future? We both love each other and are comfortable with this arrangement, I just want to be sure that I am also protecting myself just as he is, while also helping to contribute to our new household. With no home equity, I will not be building savings in that way. I’m more than happy to pay for other things.

What is the best way for me to contribute to our new life together, while also making sure that I have an investment for myself later should I need to purchase my own home, or something for my child(ren) to inherit after I am gone? I don’t want to help pay the mortgage if I’m not receiving equity. The Moneyist: ‘I’m having a hard time understanding how earning over $200,000 a year is too much to qualify for a decent stimulus check’
