For the entirety of my married life, I’ve made more money than my husband. And not a little bit more – a lot.
The year we met, in my job as a City lawyer, I made something like 10 times what he did as an actor and bartender.
Over the years, my accomplishments grew. I went from working on Wall Street to starting my own business. My work was profiled on Forbes.com, on DailyWorth and in MindBodyGreen, among other outlets. I made the cover of a magazine in the UK.
And my income continued to outpace my husband’s exponentially. When I got pregnant with our daughter in 2011, it made sense for a whole host of reasons for my husband to quit work and become the stay-at-home parent.
I entered into all of this – our partnership, our marriage, parenthood and our family arrangements — with open eyes and a complete awareness of the financial responsibilities I was undertaking.
And yet, a part of me was secretly, deeply ashamed that I was so successful. A part of me couldn’t reconcile how I had become the provider for my family while my husband stayed home with our kids, instead of the other way around.
Read more: ‘Getting my head around being a stay at home dad.’
In the dark, at night, I often wondered why I got so uncomfortable every time someone asked me, “so, what does your husband do?”
I didn’t talk about this to anyone. I was a public figure, a C-Level executive, a huge success by any measure and a feminist to boot. It seemed so retrogressive, so contrary to all that I believed in, so unappreciative, to feel this way in even the smallest amount.