If the marriage is unhappy, it is obviously a matter of money, why should you rely on your academic qualifications?
author:Pick up the tattered little songs
Obviously it's an economic problem, don't rely on academic qualifications, my classmate has a junior college, and my wife is a graduate student, so I live a prosperous life, and there is nothing wrong with harmony.
My daughter's college student is looking for a partner from the National University of Defense Technology, and the boy chased my daughter to catch up, and he cried as soon as he said that he broke up [covering his face]
Not to mention that undergraduates and junior high school students are married, that is, undergraduates and undergraduates are married, undergraduate 985 and junior college, there is still a big gap in thinking, because the educational environment is different, if you are together in the future, there will be great differences in the concept of parenting.
I didn't graduate from elementary school, my wife is a college student, she feels like she can't get along with me every day, when the child was young, she didn't have an obvious plan, and now the child is older, she is ready to continue her studies after graduation, and she yells every day to go out and take the baby to work, so I stay at home [covering my face]
Sometimes, it's not just a matter of money, my cousin is undergraduate, her husband is junior high school, and his husband makes money by doing his own business, but after marriage, communication is difficult, the three views do not agree, and he quarrels every day, and her ex-husband is very macho, so that the quarrel is too fierce and parting ways. [Unable to sob]
I was an undergraduate, and I used to have a boyfriend in junior high school, and I thought that academic qualifications were not an obstacle, but he didn't even know what the most basic and commonly used idioms were, and I could only use the vernacular to talk to him, which was really tiring.
The academic background is different, and the quarrel can't be on a point [covering his face]