What do YOU do when push comes to shove?After my ex moved out, and before we had figured out what kind of child support we would be
agreeing to for the long term, I had the daunting task of figuring out exactly what it was that I was going to do about making money. I'd been a stay at home mom for 10 years at that point, and quite frankly, I was afraid of having to tackle the actual world of "work". I didn't want to have to get an office job (I don't make a great employee as I'm not great at being told what to do), and starting my own business wasn't something that I'd previously thought of...until the ex left.
I'd have to say that the divorce process actually made me stronger in many ways. It made me realize that I shouldn't depend on 'him' for anything. It made me also realize that if I didn't step up financially, my kids and I could most likely be out on the street. That realization literally lit a fire under me. My ex makes a lot of money, but the absolute last thing that I would ever do, is ask him for help of any kind, least of all for anything that had anything to do with money.
But what do you do, when you're newly divorced with kids, and you've been a stay at home mom for as long as you care to remember?
Sure, I have divorced friends whose only alternative was to get out there and get a j-o-b, but that was my absolute last option. I also have divorced friends who have started their own businesses, and are doing very well (one has a daycare, and another has an organic fruit and vegetable delivery company). I know myself well enough to know that I wouldn't stay long in any job. I had to be the boss. Push definitely came to shove for me, and I decided to start my own business.
I started a fashion accessories business (which I still own and run), and I have an internet business that is doing quite well. I'm in the process of starting another internet business,
and if I'm going to be completely honest, I'd say that if you have any computer skills at all, the internet business is an amazing way to go. I was very skeptical when I started it, and honestly, I started it as a test. But when I saw actual money being deposited into my account because of this business, I decided to push ahead with it.
If it wasn't for my divorce, there's no way that I would ever have thought of starting my own business. I was content (gawd help me) letting my ex husband go to work, and bring home the bacon, while I stayed home and took care of kids and household. That was my mistake, and it's a mistake that I'll never make again. I make a great living, and none of what I make is tied to anyone else.
I tell my daughters (I have two), that no matter how wonderful the man that they choose to marry is, they should ALWAYS have their own "stuff". Always have their own credit, bank account, and money. Even though as a couple they might have a joint account for things like household bills, ALWAYS keep your own bank account. He doesn't have to know how much is in it, nor does he have to know that it even exists, just make sure that you have one.
It's the word that I'm spreading to every woman, married or single, that I come into contact with. When I'm grocery shopping, banking, even at Home Depot, I tell women...GET AND KEEP YOUR OWN STUFF, and DON'T GIVE IT UP ONCE YOU GET MARRIED.
Thanks for reading.
Melissa.