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This story originally appeared in the Los Angeles Times -- December 23, 2005.
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Money: The Root Of All Issues
I knew the union was doomed when he picked up a $12 triangle of aged Parmesan
cheese and tossed it in our shopping cart at Trader Joe's as if it were just
another affordable family-sized tray of frozen enchiladas. Lactose I could
tolerate, but $12 cheese made me queasy.
I was in my 20s, and I couldn't begin to articulate my discomfort with the
casual way in which he added the princely Parmesan to our joint grocery bill. I
couldn't explain why his sturdy sense of financial entitlement flew in the face
of my belief that to buy ridiculously posh cheese was to practically invite
financial disaster. For his part, I'm sure he thought it was strange that a
parking ticket would inspire the type of overwrought reaction in me generally
reserved for a community college production of "Medea." When I saw that little
pink paper under my windshield wiper, it was more than just a $30 street
cleaning violation; it was a Greek tragedy.
Suffice it to say, he and I grew up in two different worlds. His father was an
Ivy League professor, mine was an auto mechanic. None of this was discussed, not
the parents, the Parmesan, the parking tickets or the paranoia.
Here's the thing. When it comes to dating, money is the last conversational
taboo.
In my entire dating history - as long and storied as the Ming Dynasty, with
almost as many uprisings - I've never asked a guy what he earns, what he has or
what he owes.
In today's relationship climate, we are far more likely to discuss STDs than
TRWs.
Think about that. We'll review our entire sexual histories - unexplained itches
and inflammation - but discuss the interest rate on our overdue Banana Republic
card? No way. That's personal. Sex is one thing, but can you think of anything
more intimate than saying, "I'll show you mine, and you show me yours" and
sitting down at the coffee table to swap bank statements and credit card bills?
The whole topic makes me squeamish, and I'm not the only one. Money is the
biggest cause of fights during the first year of marriage, according to the
Assn. of Bridal Consultants. This suggests that money issues probably don't come
up much during the courtship phase, which is where I live. (I know you're
thinking, wow, a statistic from that eminent think tank, the Assn. of Bridal
Consultants.)
"I can't believe how many couples I see who never discussed money before they
got married," says Karen McCall, financial counselor and founder of the
Financial Recovery Institute. "If you're crawling into bed with someone, taking
off your clothes, having sex, wouldn't you want to know about their credit and
debt? I would. Full disclosure about financial issues is key when you start
getting serious with someone."
SEEMS reasonable, but how do you bring up money without sounding like a
calculating, unromantic gold digger? McCall says you have to choose the right
moment.
"If you're going on your first weekend getaway, just say something like, 'Can we
talk about the financial aspects of the trip? I don't want to assume you're
paying. Should we share some of it?' This is a perfect opportunity," she points
out. "Ask open-ended questions, be nonthreatening and don't bombard."
Does this mean bombarding and total avoidance aren't two of "The Seven Habits of
Highly Effective People"?
Obviously, there's a middle ground, some sort of mature, gentle and early
inquiry. I guess an actual conversation, as painfully well adjusted and foreign
as that sounds, beats trying to read the tea leaves - or the cheese slices.
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