I have a new perspective towards what it means to keep things private. I am thinking that keeping things private does not always mean keeping things to yourself. Before you criticize, I know that to have someone as trusted as that is rare and almost impossible, but they still exist, and sometimes you can find that person in your spouse. If you can share important details like passwords of bank account or safe, or grant them access to important documents, should we not also be able to trust these people with access to our bitcoin wallet?
Your offer to trust access to bitcoin wallet
works only if these people can really be trusted. Otherwise, you are only creating a very strong threat to the contents of your "
wallet", be it a bank account or a crypto wallet.
As one literary detective character said, spouses are the 1st suspects in a crime. Look at the divorce statistics. Are you really ready to trust your money to those who are ready to
bite your throat after a couple of years of living together?
Everything is good when it is done well. If your spouse can be trusted (deservedly entrust) with your crypto wallet, then this is wonderful and even correct, from the point of view of risk diversification (if an accident happens to you).