Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mom finds college debt worrisome

- Carolyn Hax – Stressed Over Finances

Dear Carolyn: My oldest daughter, who is pretty, intelligen­t, kind and hardworkin­g, has been dating a guy who cares for her but has college loans he won’t pay off for 15 more years. She has no student loans because we paid for her college. He has a decent job and salary, but she makes more even though she is three years younger. He has to penny-pinch to afford his loan payments.This doesn’t impact her much now because they don’t live together. While I certainly know she is an independen­t adult and would not tell her who to date, I want to caution her that marrying him would mean a lifetime of having to penny-pinch. I don’t think she realizes what she would have to give up to marry him, such as buying a house, nice vacations, the ability to afford a dog or have her children play a travel sport like she did or pay for her children’s college educations. We worked so hard for her to be financially stable and now that could all be at risk.

What, if anything, should I say to her, and how do I say it without seeming like I’m telling her to break up with him over money?

Stressed Over Finances: You say nothing, because it’s not your business. And because the couple are clearly already talking about these things, since she has all the relevant details to give you. And because you’re not privy to any other informatio­n she isn’t. She knows what he owes, what he makes and what life costs; she’s intelligen­t. She’s equipped.

It’s possible she doesn’t fully appreciate the price tag on the upper-middleclas­s lifestyle to which she’s accustomed, not having the firsthand experience of paying for it herself, sure – but is that knowledge a parent can even convey? Or should? Is this issue serious enough to warrant investing your precious advisory capital?

And wasn’t the point of your hard work to educate her? To give her a financial head start? Could tuition alone set her up for life?

I’d be happy to explore these questions – they’re fascinatin­g to me – but there’s still a whole other issue here. You say this is about wanting to protect your daughter from financial hardship, but what you’re really asking is for your daughter to protect you.

You are anxious about her. That’s the main problem. And you want her to reassure that away for you.

But her job is to lead her own life on her own terms, not to take care of your feelings. A third party is a better place to take your fears.

If your daughter invites you to share your opinion, then weigh in. But even then, please consider choosing not to: Sometimes people ask for ideas when really they’re just testing out their own. If you ask her opinion — “Hmm, what do you think you’ll do?” — instead of reflexively giving yours, then you’ll get to see whether any of her reasoning is flawed in ways your experience might help fix.

You might find, too, that she’s already thinking carefully about the exact things you’re itching to tell her to give careful thought. Win-win, if so: She gets to think independen­tly and feel your trust, and you get the finest assurance there is.

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Ask Carolyn

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