Dreben, J.
In this divorce proceeding involving the breakup of a marriage of twenty years, a probate judge ordered the husband to pay alimony to the wife in the amount of $700 a week for a period of eight years.
Because this court concluded that the rationale for the alimony portion of the judgment did not appear “either explicitly or by clear implication,”
Bowring
v.
Reid,
399 Mass. 265, 268 (1987), the
matter was remanded to the probate judge.
In particular, we stated that the findings: (1) do not discuss the “wife’s needs for support measured by the parties’ ‘station’ ” (the husband’s annual income exceeded $478,000, not including substantial contributions to his pension plan), see
Grubert
v.
Grubert,
20 Mass. App. Ct. 811, 819 (1985), and (2) “do not explain why, after this long-term marriage, alimony is limited to eight years.” The probate judge has now filed a supplementary memorandum. Neither his original findings nor his response, however, supports the amount of the alimony award or its limited duration.
In addition to challenging the provision for alimony, the wife claims error in the judge’s valuation of marital assets and in their division. Although we might have accorded different weight to some of the evidence, we conclude that the findings as to value are not clearly erroneous and that the equitable division which gave the husband somewhat more than fifty-two percent of the marital assets
falls within the area of discretion of the trial judge. We reverse the portion of the judgment relating to alimony and remand for an award commensurate with the economic circumstances of the parties, such alimony to continue until there is a material change in those circumstances. See
Gottsegen
v.
Gottsegen,
397 Mass. 617, 624 (1986).
We relate the relevant facts as found by the judge, supplemented interstitially by uncontested evidence. Dr. and Mrs. Goldman were married on February 15, 1967, and have resided in Massachusetts since 1974. At the time of the hearing, they had been married for twenty years. Mrs. Goldman was forty-six years old and Dr. Goldman forty-eight. They have two children,, a daughter, born on June 30, 1970, who lives with her father, and a son, born on November 4, 1971, who lives with his mother.
Marital difficulties began when the parties moved to Springfield in 1974. Mrs. Goldman found it hard to adjust to a new community, and Dr. Goldman was unhappy in his association with a surgical group. Described by the judge as “somewhat authoritarian and intolerant of behavior he viewfed] below his standards,” Dr. Goldman was a workaholic who rarely had time to relax or be at home for any length of time. By his own admission, his work came before his children. Mrs. Goldman, on the other hand, was permissive. She was not interested in his career and rarely entertained.
“The parties would get into wild and verbal arguments when Mrs. Goldman would be demeaned and degraded due to her lifestyle and careless spending, as well as the lack of discipline for the children. . . . Dr. Goldman assigned to her the job of supervision of the children during the day as well as their school studies while he worked.” Characterizing Mrs. Goldman’s performance in this “assignment” as a “failure,” the judge found that Dr. Goldman’s reactions were “immature and stupid.” If Mrs. Goldman countermanded his directions to the children, “the war was on.” Dr. Goldman became frustrated and angry, and responded “verbally and physically” to his wife. He also chopped up his son’s bike and destroyed his skis.
Financially, Dr. Goldman, a neurosurgeon, is most successful. His medical practice “continues to demonstrate substantial and increasing profits each year. His practice and reputation continues to grow and will continue to grow if his health holds out.” His income from all sources for the tax year 1986 was $478,560, including a $60,650 bonus from his professional corporation, but not including a contribution of approximately $69,204 paid to his pension plan by that corporation. Because his pension plan was fully funded at the time of the hearing, the money which historically has been paid into the pension plan will probably be available to him as a direct distribution of earnings in the form of increased salary or bonus. The corporation pays many of his personal expenses such as contributions and medical and travel ex
penses,
*6and may pay him bonuses at any time of the year at his discretion.
Mrs. Goldman’s only source of income at the time of the hearing was child support and alimony payments. Since the parties’ separation, she has received $1,000 a week and indirect payments for household and medical expenses. The direct and indirect payments totaled $1,600 per week or $83,200 a year. She has not worked since before the birth of her children. She was a registered nurse, is currently unlicensed and must upgrade her skills. “[T]his could be ‘on the job training.’ ” She applied for a job as a nurse and was offered a full-time position which she refused as she only wanted to work part-time. “She has an earning capacity of $25,000 to $30,000 a year if she desires it.”
The parties did not accumulate substantial liquid assets during the marriage because of their “elaborate spending habits.” They enjoyed a high life-style due to the earnings of Dr. Goldman and “lived up to the limit of his earnings.” Mrs. Goldman had unlimited access to write checks on their joint checking account which the judge found “she exercised . . . with little or no restraint.”
The judge determined that the total assets of the parties were $1,410,558 and that there were liabilities of $140,306. A summary of the judge’s separate orders reveals the following division of assets:
Mrs. Goldman
Net equity in marital home................. $335,597
Half interest in Maine land................. 8,750
Furniture and furnishings .................. 55,865
Jeep..................................... 5,100
Checking and savings accounts.............. 250
Lump-sum payment....................... 216,000
(payable $100,000 within ninety days, and thereafter “$20,000 a year for a period of five (5) years and a final payment of $16,000 in year (6) at 6.5% interest per annum, commencing one year from the final
judgment”)_
SUBTOTAL............................. $621,562
Less liabilities........................... (13,001 )
TOTAL ................................. $608,561
Dr. Goldman
Net equity 38 School Street................ $225,500
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Dreben, J.
In this divorce proceeding involving the breakup of a marriage of twenty years, a probate judge ordered the husband to pay alimony to the wife in the amount of $700 a week for a period of eight years.
Because this court concluded that the rationale for the alimony portion of the judgment did not appear “either explicitly or by clear implication,”
Bowring
v.
Reid,
399 Mass. 265, 268 (1987), the
matter was remanded to the probate judge.
In particular, we stated that the findings: (1) do not discuss the “wife’s needs for support measured by the parties’ ‘station’ ” (the husband’s annual income exceeded $478,000, not including substantial contributions to his pension plan), see
Grubert
v.
Grubert,
20 Mass. App. Ct. 811, 819 (1985), and (2) “do not explain why, after this long-term marriage, alimony is limited to eight years.” The probate judge has now filed a supplementary memorandum. Neither his original findings nor his response, however, supports the amount of the alimony award or its limited duration.
In addition to challenging the provision for alimony, the wife claims error in the judge’s valuation of marital assets and in their division. Although we might have accorded different weight to some of the evidence, we conclude that the findings as to value are not clearly erroneous and that the equitable division which gave the husband somewhat more than fifty-two percent of the marital assets
falls within the area of discretion of the trial judge. We reverse the portion of the judgment relating to alimony and remand for an award commensurate with the economic circumstances of the parties, such alimony to continue until there is a material change in those circumstances. See
Gottsegen
v.
Gottsegen,
397 Mass. 617, 624 (1986).
We relate the relevant facts as found by the judge, supplemented interstitially by uncontested evidence. Dr. and Mrs. Goldman were married on February 15, 1967, and have resided in Massachusetts since 1974. At the time of the hearing, they had been married for twenty years. Mrs. Goldman was forty-six years old and Dr. Goldman forty-eight. They have two children,, a daughter, born on June 30, 1970, who lives with her father, and a son, born on November 4, 1971, who lives with his mother.
Marital difficulties began when the parties moved to Springfield in 1974. Mrs. Goldman found it hard to adjust to a new community, and Dr. Goldman was unhappy in his association with a surgical group. Described by the judge as “somewhat authoritarian and intolerant of behavior he viewfed] below his standards,” Dr. Goldman was a workaholic who rarely had time to relax or be at home for any length of time. By his own admission, his work came before his children. Mrs. Goldman, on the other hand, was permissive. She was not interested in his career and rarely entertained.
“The parties would get into wild and verbal arguments when Mrs. Goldman would be demeaned and degraded due to her lifestyle and careless spending, as well as the lack of discipline for the children. . . . Dr. Goldman assigned to her the job of supervision of the children during the day as well as their school studies while he worked.” Characterizing Mrs. Goldman’s performance in this “assignment” as a “failure,” the judge found that Dr. Goldman’s reactions were “immature and stupid.” If Mrs. Goldman countermanded his directions to the children, “the war was on.” Dr. Goldman became frustrated and angry, and responded “verbally and physically” to his wife. He also chopped up his son’s bike and destroyed his skis.
Financially, Dr. Goldman, a neurosurgeon, is most successful. His medical practice “continues to demonstrate substantial and increasing profits each year. His practice and reputation continues to grow and will continue to grow if his health holds out.” His income from all sources for the tax year 1986 was $478,560, including a $60,650 bonus from his professional corporation, but not including a contribution of approximately $69,204 paid to his pension plan by that corporation. Because his pension plan was fully funded at the time of the hearing, the money which historically has been paid into the pension plan will probably be available to him as a direct distribution of earnings in the form of increased salary or bonus. The corporation pays many of his personal expenses such as contributions and medical and travel ex
penses,
*6and may pay him bonuses at any time of the year at his discretion.
Mrs. Goldman’s only source of income at the time of the hearing was child support and alimony payments. Since the parties’ separation, she has received $1,000 a week and indirect payments for household and medical expenses. The direct and indirect payments totaled $1,600 per week or $83,200 a year. She has not worked since before the birth of her children. She was a registered nurse, is currently unlicensed and must upgrade her skills. “[T]his could be ‘on the job training.’ ” She applied for a job as a nurse and was offered a full-time position which she refused as she only wanted to work part-time. “She has an earning capacity of $25,000 to $30,000 a year if she desires it.”
The parties did not accumulate substantial liquid assets during the marriage because of their “elaborate spending habits.” They enjoyed a high life-style due to the earnings of Dr. Goldman and “lived up to the limit of his earnings.” Mrs. Goldman had unlimited access to write checks on their joint checking account which the judge found “she exercised . . . with little or no restraint.”
The judge determined that the total assets of the parties were $1,410,558 and that there were liabilities of $140,306. A summary of the judge’s separate orders reveals the following division of assets:
Mrs. Goldman
Net equity in marital home................. $335,597
Half interest in Maine land................. 8,750
Furniture and furnishings .................. 55,865
Jeep..................................... 5,100
Checking and savings accounts.............. 250
Lump-sum payment....................... 216,000
(payable $100,000 within ninety days, and thereafter “$20,000 a year for a period of five (5) years and a final payment of $16,000 in year (6) at 6.5% interest per annum, commencing one year from the final
judgment”)_
SUBTOTAL............................. $621,562
Less liabilities........................... (13,001 )
TOTAL ................................. $608,561
Dr. Goldman
Net equity 38 School Street................ $225,500
(Dr. Goldman’s oEce)
Personal property ......................... 72,010
Automobile (Ferrari) ...................... 25,000
Cash.................................... 22,696
Cash value, life insurance.................. 16,341
Pension.................................. 433,937
East Coast Historical Assn.................. 72,013
(a real estate venture)
Baystate Neuosurgical & Neurological Group,
Inc...................................... 128,749
(Dr. Goldman’s professional corporation)_
SUBTOTAL .............................$1,004,996
Less: Lump sum payment.................. (216,000)
(not discounted for present value)
Liabilities.............!............ (113,615)
TOTAL ................................. $675,381
In addition, as indicated earlier, the judge ordered the husband to pay the wife $700 a week as alimony for eight years and $300 a week as child support for their son until such time as he becomes emancipated.
******8 This was a reduction of $600 a week. The temporary order had provided her with $1,000 a week in alimony and child support payments, but had also provided her with indirect benefits in the amount of $600.
1.
Amount of alimony award.
No explanation can be gleaned from either the judge’s original findings or his supplemental memorandum for the low alimony figure. It is not consistent with the judge’s findings as to Dr. Goldman’s high income and his findings concerning the couple’s previous elaborate life-style.
The judge rejected the parties’ statements as to need as being “inflated and not realistic” and stated, “It is the Court’s
feeling
that Mrs. Goldman’s needs will be met by a payment of alimony and support of $1,000 per week . . .” (emphasis supplied). In discussing the wife’s needs in his supplemental memorandum, the judge stated:
“It is incumbent upon the litigants to show by a preponderance of the evidence what the needs are, this they have failed to do. The mere fact that the Husband has the ability to pay does not, to my knowledge, dictate a corresponding need to receive an amount commensurate
with such ability to pay.[
] It is incumbent upon a recipient spouse, in fact it is an affirmative duty, to mitigate the burdens of support by utilizing his or her financial means and earnings potential or both.
“There is no law that assures every married woman the right of a life of idleness.
Commonwealth
v.
Whiston,
306 Mass. 65, 66 [1940].”
The judge then reiterated his finding that the wife’s earning capacity is in the range of $25,000 to $30,000 a year.
In his original findings, the judge found that all the income and marital assets were due to Dr. Goldman’s efforts. He noted, however, that Mrs. Goldman had located the building in which Dr. Goldman maintained his practice and that she had supervised its renovations. Also, Mrs. Goldman had been “assigned” the responsibility of caring for the home and the children throughout the marriage. She arranged for their schooling and their extracurricular activities, attended PTA meetings, took the children to visit their grandparents, and oversaw their religious education. “She was not very successful in this endeavor, but Dr. Goldman must also share in this failure.”
In his supplementary memorandum, the judge pointed to the fact that the marriage began to deteriorate in 1974 when their life-style was unremarkable. “This marriage partnership started its significant deterioration at about this time. [Mrs. Goldman’s] non-monetary contribution to the rearing of the children and their care and supervision was a disaster.”
Finally, in discussing Mrs. Goldman’s needs with regard to her station, the judge, on remand, stated that these were adequately met, and that it was not realistic for her to retain and maintain the present eleven-room house with its attendant expenses.
The judge’s stress on the problems of the children to characterize the wife’s nonmonetary contribution as a “disaster”
and “failure” is not a reason for a low alimony award. The contribution of a wife who is fully responsible for the home and children cannot be considered negative and discounted because the children have problems. This is not a case where there is evidence, or even a hint, of neglect or misfeasance on the part of Mrs. Goldman. One can only wonder at the notion that one parent can “assign” responsibility of children to the other, as did Dr. Goldman, and then, because the children are troubled, take as naught, or even negative, the “as-signee’s” contribution.
That the marriage began to deteriorate before the parties’ life-style escalated is also no reason to limit alimony to the parties’ earlier station. Unlike the situation in
Savides
v.
Savides,
400 Mass. 250, 252 (1987), where it was uncontested that both parties had established separate relationships and had ceased to hold themselves out to the community as husband and wife, here, despite their difficulties, the parties clearly remained married.
Moreover, the emphasis on the wife’s earning capacity based on full-time employment does not fit the circumstances. Not only has the wife not worked for eighteen years and must be retrained and relicensed, but, in view of the judge’s findings, set forth in the margin,
concerning her
son’s school difficulties, and his recent dramatic progress, her refusal to take a full-time job and her wish to work only part-time while her son is at home is not unreasonable. In these circumstances, emphasis on the full-time earning capacity of the wife and penalizing her for making a decision to be at home is not appropriate. In any event, even if the judge’s figures are accurate, and the wife could earn $30,000 a year, the evidence does not suggest, and the judge’s findings do not support, the conclusion that her total income would be sufficient for her to maintain her previous mode of living. See
Gottsegen
v.
Gottsegen,
397 Mass. at 623. That the judge might not have approved of the parties’ life-style is irrelevant.
The evidence showed that Dr. Goldman continued to live his lavish life-style with trips to Africa and other elaborate expenditures, while Mrs. Goldman’s economic condition deteriorated, even under the temporary order which, as indicated, provided $600 more a week in indirect benefits than did the final award.
As pointed out in
Gottsegen
v.
Gottsegen,
397 Mass. at 623, the fundamental purpose of traditional alimony, namely, maintenance of a wife “according to the property and condition of her husband,”
Coe
v.
Coe,
313 Mass. 232, 236 (1943), was not changed by the passage of G. L. c. 208, § 34. Quoting from
Grubert
v.
Grubert,
20 Mass. App. Ct. at 819, which in turn quoted
Partridge
v.
Partridge,
14 Mass. App. Ct. 918, 919 (1982), the Supreme Judicial Court stated in
Gottsegen
at 623-624, “The focus of any financial award must include ‘the crucial issue in an alimony dispute, namely, the [spouse’s] need for support and maintenance in relationship to the respective financial circumstances of the parties.’ ” Absent good reason, in a long term marriage, there is no justification for the life-style of one spouse to go down while the other remains high.
In sum, the award of alimony is not consistent with the judge’s findings of Dr. Goldman’s income and the parties’ life-style. On remand, the judge may call for additional evidence, such as past expenditures of the wife, to show what amounts are required to allow her to maintain her previous station. Specific and detailed findings are to be made with respect to a new award of alimony which show consideration of the wife’s needs in light of her station in life during the marriage.
2.
Duration of award.
There is also no adequate explanation of the limitation of the alimony to eight years. In the early 1970’s, Dr. Goldman was in a serious automobile accident. He was left with several metallic screws and pins in his lower extremities, and he suffers from swelling and pain in his right ankle. In the spring of 1987, he underwent a lumbar disk operation, and his attending physician urged him to reduce his workload and not work in excess of forty hours a week.
Both in his original memorandum and in his response to our remand, the judge stated, “[Ojne would have to be hiding his head in the sand to feel that the serious injuries he has received will in no way affect his ability in the future, or that the hours he is presently putting in will continue without abatement.” In his later memorandum the judge added, “Further, is it necessary or mandatory that he continue to work at his present pace so that he may maintain his wife at the present standard while she decides not to be gainfully employed?”
Dr. Goldman’s earnings have, each year, shown “substantial and increasing profits” and “[h]is practice and reputation continues to grow.” Neither the wife’s earning capacity nor the speculation as to the husband’s future earnings supports the limitation of alimony to eight years. The termination of alimony at that time does not “bear some relation to the financial circumstances of the parties.”
Gottsegen
v.
Gottsegen,
397 Mass. at 624. Where future events cannot be predicted with any measure of certainty, an alimony award should be based on present conditions. A complaint for modification based on a material change in circumstances is the means for dealing with future events.
3.
Equitable division.
We have examined the claims of the wife which relate to the equitable division, and, while there may be some question as to the valuation of some of the assets, even if there are some errors, we deem them insignificant. Cf.
Drapek
v.
Drapek,
399 Mass. 240, 247 (1987). “Mathematical precision is not required of equitable division of property.”
Fechtor
v.
Fechtor,
26 Mass. App. Ct. 859, 861 (1989). We reject the wife’s most significant claim of error in valuation, the failure of the judge to allocate any amount to the goodwill of the husband’s professional corporation. The judge was warranted in accepting the husband’s accountant’s opinion that there was no goodwill in this one-man professional corporation. For a discussion of the classification of professional goodwill, see generally Gregory, The Law of Equitable Distribution § 6.03 (1989).
4.
Conclusion.
The portion of the judgment as it relates to alimony is reversed, and the matter is remanded to the probate judge for a redetermination of alimony and attorneys’ fees (see note 7,
supra)
consistent with this opinion. The wife is to have costs of this appeal. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.
So ordered.