Boyfriend calls fiancé 'controlling' after he reveals secret credit card debt while planning their wedding: 'He has zero savings and has been carrying credit card debt for years'

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  • A man argues with his girlfriend across the table
  • Turns out bringing up finances before our wedding makes me the controlling one.

    We've been engaged for nine months, wedding is this fall and somehow between venue deposits and guest lists and everything else that comes with planning our wedding we never once stopped to talk about money until last week and it's been rattling around in my head ever since.
  • I budget, save and have no debt and have been consistent about it for years so I went in assuming we were roughly on the same page because we'd never had any real tension around money before but what came out of it knocked me sideways. He has zero savings and has been carrying credit card debt for
  • years without ever mentioning it and when I brought up how we were going to handle that before the wedding he said we'd FIGURE IT OUT on the other side of it. When I kept pushing he said I was being controlling, that not everyone thinks about money the
  • way I do and that combining finances is what marriage is for and it all evens out eventually. He said it like it was the most obvious thing in the world like I was the one making it complicated. We're four days into this and every time I think we've gotten somewhere something
  • else comes up. I've spent years building something I'm proud of and I don't think he fully understands what he's asking me to walk away from.
  • Commenters gave their wisdom and advice.

    Aggravating-Oil3061 Making the person asking reasonable questions feel like the problem is such a classic smh.
  • IndicationKey3778 Girl. Do not marry this person. If you must, get an iron clad prenup. Or have a wedding and don't file the paperwork to be legally married. Whatever keeps you from combining finances with him
  • A man argues with a woman across the table
  • Defiant Violette that combining finances is what marriage is for and it all evens out eventually. Translation: he's looking forward to paying off his
  • debt with your money. He fully understands the situation, that's why he kept his debt a secret, and it's why he's trying to minimize your desire to discuss it before the wedding. Call it off, sister.
  • cottagecorehoe That's wild that you've both planned a wedding with no conversation about money until now! I am also surprised you both have gotten engaged without conversations about saving, spending, financial goals/habits, debts, and at the end of the day, the numbers as well.
  • You are not being controlling. You're being responsible and being the one to actually think about the consequences of spending and how to ensure you're both afloat and doing well rather than spending with no regard for things.
  • Oof, this is a tough one. Honestly, his behavior around money and this showing you a glimpse of what you'll have to do and deal with for potentially the rest of your life would give me pause. I couldn't be with someone I didn't trust with money and the decisions they make.
  • What are your thoughts here? What advice are you looking for?
  • Tough Teaching_6589 I would not combine my finances with someone holding years long credit card debt with no apparent effort to have paid it off. He's been hoping you didn't ask so he could marry you and make it your problem too.
  • Haunting_Box_7897 You're not making it complicated you just happen. to be the only one in this situation thinking like an adult about money.
  • Illustrious-One9794 Asking about finances before a wedding is not controlling it is the minimum anyone should be doing.
  • Uncal_Thal You're both right for yourselves. Unfortunately, wrong for each other. Money is the biggest thing that married couples fight about. If you can't reach an agreement, call off the wedding.
  • BendersDafodil Like they say in the audit business, you gotta verify the numbers. Always remember all things are numbered so you can count and verify them.
  • Don't take anyone's word when you can go in and verify the numbers yourself, that's why we get educated to count.
  • It's not controlling to verify the integrity of the numbers presented. It's prudence and DUE DILIGENCE. Especially if you will be responsible for the things being quantified like debt and finances. Your fiancé basically wants you to take over an operation without knowing what the financial fundamentals are. Like is it profitable or a
  • money pit? Personally, I'd press pause on joining this financial quagmire until he has his finances in order.
  • KilnTime You really need to have a conversation about his expectation that your savings will be used to pay his existing debts. Getting married means that you
  • form a financial union during the period when you are married. But it's not like a get out of jail free card. You should discuss a prenup with him, otherwise, you're not financially compatible.
  • 27Jarvis This would be an absolute dealbreaker for me. This is perilous ground to begin a marriage. I strongly encourage you to go to counseling and find reconciliation before you get
  • married. Money problems are one of the primary causes of divorce. To START a marriage with these issues is practically dooming it to fail. His avoidance to talk about this suggests it is a much
  • bigger issue than he is letting on. He should be totally open and honest about this, and should not expect you to shoulder any of this burden. If you choose to move. forward with the wedding, get a solid prenup and keep all of your finances separate.

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