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A Friend Stopped By | 06/25/2009 12:00 am

Isn't It Time We Marry for Money? The Gold Digger Debate, by Daniela Drake

The author of a controversial new book, Smart Girls Marry Money, argues that when it comes to finding a life partner, riches are more important than love.
By Daniela Drake

Editor’s Note: Daniela Drake, M.D., is the co-author of Smart Girls Marry Money: How Women Have Been Duped Into the Romantic Dream — And How They’re Paying For It. A former McKinsey consultant with degrees from Wellesley College and Stanford University, she is now a full-time primary-care physician, and the happily married mother of two.

At first, the whole idea for our book started as a joke.

While we working moms, dropping off our kids at preschool and dashing to work, we noticed other moms were a bit more leisurely about the whole morning routine.

How did they do it?

We were busy professionals; the moms with their feet on the table nursing hot coffee were not. "We weren’t the smart ones after all," we joked. "The smart ones married money."

But as we joked, others laughed and nodded (not the ones sipping coffee; they assured us they were very busy, what with yoga and Pilates and all). Of course, as serious professionals it never crossed our minds to marry for money. We made our own money and married for love, like we were supposed to.

Let's be real here for a second. Romantic love is not some utopian state of high moral rectitude. It's an emotion—and therefore fleeting.

So why did this joke about marrying for money ring so true? Maybe because we were so tired of the demands of modern life and flat-out just needed a rest. Did other women feel like this, too? In our quest for the answer, we found out what is just hitting the news cycle now: that 40 years after modern feminism, a lot of women are plenty miserable.

It turned out that what was true for us was true for millions of women. Work felt unfair, and research showed it was unfair. In addition, women who divorced were largely the recipients of lopsided divorce agreements that left many in dire economic straits.

So if work is unfair to women and marriage disposable, we reasoned, why not marry for money? Your broken heart may well be soothed by that regular hot-stone massage you get in the divorce settlement. It seemed funny to us.

"Not funny," wrote one wife of a wealthy man who assured me she married for love. "The grass is always greener; we struggle too. We have nannies to coordinate …"

But compare that to a young patient of mine who’d been dumped by the love of her life after giving birth to an autistic child. She struggles with food stamps, special education and loneliness while she cobbles together her life and her future.

Obviously, marrying for love was working out well for some, but not for others. Why should it? In our culture, "being in love" is the only valid, moral reason to marry. But that means that "being out of love" is a valid, if not moral, reason to divorce.

Let’s be real here for a second. Romantic love is not some utopian state of high moral rectitude; it’s an emotion — and therefore fleeting. Science now shows that romantic love lasts, at most, two years. One researcher calls "being in love" a type of madness. Perhaps we shouldn’t be making the decision to marry when we are technically temporarily insane.

So we ask, "Should the decision to marry take into account something else besides our feelings?"

But by spotlighting these issues, we have roused the angry guardians that protect the gates of the status quo. We have been accused of being bitter bitches, crazy feminists, angry divorcees, regressive morons, purveyors of trash, promoters of prostitution, idiots and gold diggers. And that was just the first e-mail.

61 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Victoria J
I have friends who married money and they have paid in emotional abandonment and sometimes verbal and physical abuse for every cent of that good life. They do live in beautiful houses, but staying in them I found an emptiness (I am sure this doesn’t happen to everyone) and a hollowness to their lives. As a divorced single woman with a top professional job, many times I found their husbands ridiculing them in my presence and comparing them to me. I called a halt to that immediately. With all their accoutrements of wealth,  I never envied them. Instead most were fascinated with my job and my freedom. Yearning to have something of there own. However, I must say most were simply daydreaming, they had gotten used to the pain and the lifestyle and as they had gotten older, could not fathom leaving that space no matter the humiliation. I was married to a very wealthy man, but I was young enough that I still had deep faith that I could make it on my own. I wasn’t happy to constantly have to put someone else first. I remember the lament of another friend when I told her I was getting a divorce and I had initiated it. She could not believe it. And to have walked away without a mink coat was blaspheme. This was in the late 60’s.  I was just a kid.  I have a girlfriend friend now, whose second marriage was to someone with a great deal of money, he was an s.o.b in business and I hear he behaved he same at home…but I came to know them later in their marriage and he seemed nicer. She complained about him and her children treated him terribly. Though they clearly enjoyed the lifestyle his wealth brought their mother. He died and she now has all of that money and not a clue what to do with it. No sense of adventure that includes foreign travelor even travel within the states, no interests that include helping others and no ability to step out of the box to live an extraordinary life when money is no object. So the idea that money is the savior is foolish. Those women with their feet up drinking coffee may have to go home to some oaf, who demands she identify every cent spent . Folks, no matter how it seems, none of us are getting out here without paying dues. So the silliness of believing wealth settles everything means these women don’t really know any wealthy women because there are plenty of stories of truly unhappy wealthy women that would make you run for the hills and find the decent guy who will have you.
By Victoria J on 06/27/2009 10:57 am
Messy ONE

You know money is neutral, right? I’m sure it makes people feel better to say that the people they know who have money are all miserable, but you know that’s more about them than the money. People have the same issues whether they have money or not. It’s all very well to feel sorry for someone that doesn’t work but doesn’t know how to cope with life when you have a rewarding career yourself, but how happy do you think these same people would be if they had to work for minimum wage at a boring and miserable job?

 The nasty, rich workaholic isn’t going to be less of a workaholic if he’s not making a fortune doing it, and the rotten-tempered substance abuser with a trust fund would be exactly the same person if he drove a truck to make a living. The ladies who lunch and moan about their boring lives would do the same amount of moaning if they DID work. It would just be about other things. 

Money isn’t entirely about happiness. All it buys is time, and in the end "stuff" doesn’t count. 

By Messy ONE on 06/30/2009 9:23 am
albert miller
I would say, marry someone who has the personal qualities that you most desire in a mate. As for the fleetingness of emotion, so is the satisfaction you get from a good meal. Does that mean you should eat just anything? The satisfaction you get from the appropriate mate for you, is truly valuable beyond words.
By albert miller on 06/27/2009 4:39 pm
Diana T
This woman needs to read David Richo’s book on Adult Relationships. 
By Diana T on 06/27/2009 5:17 pm
J B
When you marry for money…you earn every dime.
By J B on 06/29/2009 1:31 pm
Lym BO

Really the problem with women & men today is they want it all. Women have been taught to be wrothy they must have a career. Many women also work because they want to live a certain lifestyle. I’ve actually heard women say "I have to work", Not because they are single moms or have an unemployed spouse but becasue they want to drive a new vehicle, etc.   They sacrifice time with their children so they can give them material things. Then they qualify it by saying they are doing it so their kids can have more than they did. More what? Video games? Toys? Designer clothes? Drugs? Certainly not more love or discipline. I’ve seen it. Parents work full time, then they have housework. The kids get about 10 minutes week worth of attention.   It’s just crazy. 

I had a career. It’s there if I need it. Right now, my children need a mother.  They don’t need child care. They don’t need a Playstation or whatever it is "everybody else" has. 

I married for love, but first I only dated men with ambition & college educated with stable families-like me.   So I fall into both categories, BUT if I had married someone with a middle class income. I still would have made do with what he made & stayed home to raise the kids. And go the spa or gym or for coffee when they are in school. LOL 

By Lym BO on 06/29/2009 10:06 pm
Lym BO
Sorry "worthy not Wrothy. 
By Lym BO on 06/29/2009 10:06 pm
darcus grey
As a college graduate and former (by choice) newspaper editor, I love what this book is promoting and couldn’t agree more. I’m counting the copies I need to buy as gifts for some of my women pals and a few over-the-top romantics in my family.
By darcus grey on 06/29/2009 10:16 pm
dee claxton
I married for love.  I am not wealthy.  I have worked everyday since I was 17 year old.  I was a single mom for 15+ years, worked two jobs, stuggled to keep up with the bills.  And, I love my life.  I love my children, my job, my friends, my new husband, and the life I wake up to everyday.  Some of my choices may not have been stellar, but they were MY choices to make.  They have made me a strong, responsible, dependable woman.  I wouldn’t change a thing. 
By dee claxton on 06/30/2009 2:16 pm
Sandy B

I have never thought love is enough for marriage- there needs to be respect, compatible values etc.  But this is pretty cheesy.  Love is not enough, but it is essential- for me anyway. 

Also, marriage is very complicated.  I know wives of very wealthy men that stayed home raised children etc- and wish like heck they had maintained a career so they could leave and have some hope of supporting themselves.

Also, whose to say those women not working didn’t work hard before they had children?  Who’s to say those men were wealthy from the get-go? Maybe part of their successs was a loving accepting wife- who backed them all the way.

Oh- and love can last a long time.  I love my husband very much- and he gives every indication of loving me though we’ve only been married 20 years.

By Sandy B on 07/01/2009 12:37 am