Wedding Woes

Not Mr. Moneybags

Dear Prudence,

My husband and I are struggling with whether to send money to his half-sister, who just reached out asking for money to cover a life-saving surgery. My husband immigrated to the U.S. from an African country, and he routinely sends money to his parents and siblings, and pays for his nieces’ schooling, all of which I support (and some of it is our joint money).

Lately, he’s been receiving more requests for money for various things, like renovating a culturally significant structure that he personally doesn’t care about. Now his half-sister, whom he’s never met or spoken with, is asking for money for surgery. I want the decision to be mostly his, but he’s struggling with what to do because he feels the requests for money will be endless as long as he fulfills them. He’s even worried our infant daughter will inherit these requests for money when she’s older. How do we go about this?

I know I haven’t said how much money my husband’s half-sister is asking for, because she hasn’t said, and we haven’t asked (yet). We’re lucky to both have relatively good-paying jobs, but we have a very high mortgage, and our costs are about to skyrocket when our daughter starts daycare. We also want to be able to afford another child. My husband sending money to his family has never been a problem in our marriage, but it is something we talked a lot about before getting married. This latest request, on top of other pending requests, has him struggling with how to proceed with this specific request and going forward. I suggested he establish a budget of money to send home and be clear about that with his family and enforce that boundary, but we also wouldn’t know how to handle it if a request like this came after the annual budget was spent. My husband will probably just send her the money, because he would feel awful if we hear that she’s died, as would I. But what is the right way to go about this?

Re: Not Mr. Moneybags

  • What about asking your H's sister to talk to her with the physician present and then find out the name of the place where the surgery is going to take place to pay them directly? 

    Also, he doesn't have to pay.  He can just send $ to an amount that's within the budget.  And maybe that's the way to start this.  Sit together, look at your finances and if he wants to send money to his family regularly, come up with a figure that works rather than to be used for major life expenses. 
  • He's never even met her? That seems like a pretty good place to draw the line to me. 

    But larger, I think he has to have the hard conversation with his parents that while he wants to help, he also needs to take care of himself and his own kids first. 
  • I have a sneaking suspicion that half of the money is not going where people say it is. And it would be a hard line drawn at giving money for people I have never met. The requests are going to be endless. And he probably will be met with vitriol for refusing but you aren't an endless money tree. 


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  • ei34ei34 member
    Knottie Warrior 5000 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    edited February 26
    If he/you really can afford to help out (which I'd probably want to sit down and re-examine once childcare enters the budget), if I were him I'd have a conversation / send an email to the parents along the lines of "I will be sending home $___ each month - instead of me receiving requests from multiple folks, you can distribute it however you see fit".  

    And honestly, with childcare and possibly another child looming, this is the perfect time to reassess finances, and he could even use your family's new expense as his reasoning for the new system.  (I don't think he needs to justify it, but maybe he does?) 

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