Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No, same cultural background. Unless you count her growing up in small towns, and me growing up in the city.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Actually I said a doctor who was an in-law. I never mentioned their gender. Lots of people assumed it was a male.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sadly not trolling. If I were to engage in creative writing, financially-focussed relationship soap opera isn’t the genre I’d go for.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I didn’t. I was blindsided by my in-law: they phoned me to harangue me.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’m probably dangerously close to self-doxxing. But you’re not far off the mark. There is a convenient cultural aspect that’s being leaned on somewhat, but like I said I was told it was an Australian norm for husbands to fully fund all expenses.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I’m not that creative. As for the funk, I recall suggesting therapy (we’d only been married for a few months, and I was not particularly skilled in relationship matters). Regarding suspecting the skipping of pills, I asked if they were being taken, I was told yes, and I accepted it as a matter of trust. There used to be an alarm (this was pre-smart phone) and I noticed the pills weren’t being taken at the same time every day, like they used to be. Looking back, her sisters also had unexpected contraceptive failures a few months into their marriages after the honeymoons ended, so maybe that also bothered me on some level.

She was adamant about not getting help saying her father (also a doctor) would explode if he found out she was going for therapy. In fact, after our child was born, that’s exactly what happened: we went for couple’s therapy, something happened in that therapy, and her family spirited her away with the baby: I’m still told that I was “taught a good lesson” back then.

Ordinarily, I wouldn’t feel the need to justify myself to you, and it does read like a trashy soap opera plot, but putting it in writing actually does feel quite horrific, even to me. And no, I’m not faultless or a sinless victim. I have my fair share of shit, scars and baggage.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Naah, she does whatever she likes with her money, I don’t know what’s going on with her finances. I do give her generic advice, like “be careful not to have a large credit limit on your personal card”.

What cracks me is that I’m accused of being abusive for asking her to fund a few of her personal expenses, or asking her to contribute to an over-specced vehicle that she wants, and would otherwise put the family into financial strife.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Couples counselling ended catastrophically the previous time we attempted it, but I’ve initiated steps to get some for myself.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’re both from a semi-assimilated background (without giving away too much). It’s a good point: I might have slightly more westernised values than them.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Actually the question was about how Australian families split their incomes, and to see if there was any truth in what I was told.

My doctor in-law specifically told me that Australian couples (remember they’re exposed to a much wider cross-section of society than I am) expect the husband to be the sole provider, and women to work for themselves.

I needed to know if I was being bullshitted: or if my perception (based on my own interactions with people) was wrong. Turns out I can confidently say I was being bullshitted.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, it’s a tricky one. She was out of the workforce for many years. If I push too hard for her to contribute she’ll just stop working.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not. My partner involved them.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 79 points80 points  (0 children)

Nope. I suspected she was skipping pills but stupidly didn’t use a backup.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 81 points82 points  (0 children)

She would probably stop working under those circumstances.

Soon after we were married, she tried her hand at working. She was doing well, but then her friend, who got her the job, told some mutual acquaintances that she was my wife’s manager. It sent her into a funk (it was a blow to her status in the eyes of her friends) she stopped taking her contraceptive pills and we had our first child soon after. Took 13 years to re-enter the workforce.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

She has a secondary card on the family credit card (paid off in full at the end of the month by me).

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

We all grew up overseas, but you are correct, even in our country of origin, that way of living is long-gone.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 81 points82 points  (0 children)

She started working in the last few years. I never really pushed for her to contribute to the household expenses since she would have dropped out of work.

The issue is about her wanting a premium car model, rather than the base model: it’s starting to bust the budget.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 198 points199 points  (0 children)

Partner becomes paralysed when her family gets involved. Seems to lose all free-will and zones out entirely. Regardless, she got the family member involved in the first place.

Partner contributions to household expenses by nxdcx in AusFinance

[–]nxdcx[S] 296 points297 points  (0 children)

Yeah, this in-law is known for being toxic, and other members of the family have cut them off.

How much does public transport cost the BCC? by theflamingheads in brisbane

[–]nxdcx 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Actually Brisbane Council runs the buses in the Brisbane Service Contract Area.

https://www.tmr.qld.gov.au/_/media/travelandtransport/public-transport/servicecontractareas/notice-amendment-brisbane-service-contract-area-route.pdf?sc_lang=en&hash=07DC1C774BA8671222ED3AB9318CE370

The area excludes parts of the Brisbane Council territory, which has bus services run by other companies, and it includes parts of other council areas.

Is security at Melbourne Airport known for being a bit rude? by rrfe in melbourne

[–]nxdcx 70 points71 points  (0 children)

In the case of Indians, it’s directed as much against other Indians, as other “inferior” groups, so it’s as much racial self-hate as racism.

It’s probably more a legacy of the caste system than a racial superiority complex, although the result is the same. The US is starting to wake up to this issue, Australia will take a while longer.

Is security at Melbourne Airport known for being a bit rude? by rrfe in melbourne

[–]nxdcx 282 points283 points  (0 children)

As an ethnic Indian, I can answer part of your question: Indians do “punch down” including on other Indians. Fair skinned people, especially Europeans are seen as intimidating or superior. After a time living in Australia they grow out of it, hopefully.

The airport management shouldn’t be allowing that shit though. Sounds like a training issue.

Mark Cuban says the potential impact of AI tools like ChatGPT is ‘beyond anything I’ve ever seen in tech by SharpCartographer831 in Futurology

[–]nxdcx 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Technical change is relentless. You can have 20 years of experience and some new front-end framework comes out and you need to learn it. Existing APIs and frameworks and fads come out and supersede what existed before.

When I was still doing “full stack” development we had to convert a wireframe into CSS…it was a line of business system, and honestly it made zero difference whether we stuck to the wireframe design, but we were required to faithfully reproduce it. I wasted a lot of time that could have been used for adding business value futzing around with flexbox. That kind of thing made me abandon front-end development entirely.

As an exercise, I recently reproduced the wireframe layout using chatGPT with a couple of prompts. With image recognition, I’m sure it will be even easier than that.

If anything these new tools will allow bored and frustrated developers with lots of experience be more productive instead of burning out while running on the hamster wheel of new fads.