My husband passed away two years ago, leaving me in control of
our estate. I am in my 40s and just beginning to date again. I would like to
find a life partner, but do not need one for my financial well-being. In fact,
I’m finding that my money is often an obstacle. It either intimidates men, or
they seem overly interested in it. How can I present myself in a way that
lessens its impact? I appreciate how difficult it can be to move
forward, especially when you question the intentions of the people you meet. I
find it interesting that you say your husband left you in control of the estate.
Hmm. You should have felt in control while he was here with you; his death
should not have triggered your sense of control—legal or emotional. That has me thinking that the issue isn’t your relationships
with men, but your relationship with money. And it is important to understand
that money itself is never the problem; what trips us up is how we feel about
the money we have (or don’t have). I can tell you this is the same whether I am
talking to someone panicked over an $8,000 unpaid credit card bill or someone
handling an eight-figure estate. If there is a money concern, it is because the
person lets money control the situation. Money has no power on its own—it only
has power that we choose to give it. My sense is that, right now, you let your money define you, and
that, in turn, attracts the wrong type of man. Slow down and think about that.
What do you believe in? What do you love? What do you hate? When you can answer
those questions without mentioning your money, you will have everything you
need, because you will understand that who you are has nothing to do with what
you have. When your actions exude that attitude, you will find the right type of
man. And who knows, perhaps he has 10 figures that his late wife left him. Suze Orman, author, Women & Money and host of CNBC’s The Suze
Orman Show It is prudent to make sure you’ve
taken some legal steps to keep your money from presenting obstacles in any
future relationships. The best way to do that is to keep all things pertaining
to it seemingly out of your control and totally private to the extent possible.
You don’t say whether you have children and whether you have any charitable
intentions, so it is hard to go too far with advice. But at the very least I
would suggest: • Create a revocable trust and fund it with the assets in your
estate. • Tell any suitor that your separate funds are just that, and
that they are in a trust, invested independently by managers selected by your
attorneys. • Clarify that your attorneys and investment managers have
instructed you to keep your affairs private and not to discuss them with
anyone. • Explain that your attorneys insist that a prenuptial
agreement (which keeps your assets separate for all time) is a condition
precedent of marriage. • Make it clear that this is the end of the discussion, as you
are not very informed beyond the above, nor do you care to be. It is important
that you present yourself as having little interest in money. The less said,
the better. John F. Schaefer, The Law Firm of John F. Schaefer, Birmingham,
Mich.
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