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Fiance choosing his parents over me

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  • #211395
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Please help me..I’ve been waiting all day for some guidance..I feel extremely depressed and can’t stop thinking about this..

    I’m ruining my career over this as well..

    #211427
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear VJ:

    I didn’t read your thread until a short while ago. If I knew of it earlier, I would have answered earlier.

    It reads to me that your fiancé already chose his parents over you. It is already done. If you got married with him, living with his parents, your life would be miserable, more than it is now.

    I don’t think that his mother’s behavior is a result of the tragedy in her life, losing one of her sons. She was probably a problem before that, a problem from which all her children suffered. And then your parents suffered and you suffered and still do.

    One person can cause a lot of misery to a lot of other people. Avail yourself to her, and there will be more of it, more misery. Marry him, and there will be misery for your children, her grandchildren.

    You asked how to face society after this. Question: does society know about your past pregnancy? His parents don’t know, your parents don’t. How will anyone else know?

    anita

    #211429
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hi Anita..

    Sorry it was a long post..

    Nobody knows about the pregnancy.. but wouldn’t it be unfair to my future partners if I don’t tell them about it ever?

    I can’t stop thinking why can’t he be with me and still provide for his parents..it just hurts too much..

    #211443
    Michelle
    Participant

    It is in your best interests that you let this go. It’s going to hurt (and probably for awhile) but getting involved with this family, in particular the mother-in-law, will cause you nothing but strife and unhappiness in life. Based on what you wrote, I am offended on your behalf for how she has treated you and your family. It’s shameful. I am very impressed with your own parents. They tried their best and went above-and-beyond for these people to the point of apologizing for things that they shouldn’t have.

    I feel like there is a cultural component here too. Are you from India or Indian background? I get the impression that you are based on certain statements, including the one about “what will society think?”. I dated an Indian a few years ago (I am caucasian). In that experience, I learned that love and relationships have a different meaning. Perhaps his family is more conservative in their approach to these things. I feel they aren’t seeing you (or your family) as human beings, but rather commodities.

    Trust the advice here. You can – and will – do so much better in life. Do not accept this abuse (and it IS abuse).

    #211447
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hey Michelle..

    Yes I am from India..

    They are not very conservative.. but I just felt like anything that I did was wrong according to her..sometim so things that I didn’t do were also wrong..

    She had made it a point to criticize each and everything that happened at the engagement or in our interactions with them later.. my parents apologies also had some issues according to her..

    I know that getting rid of her is something good about this whole thing..

    But me and my bf loved each other very much..we still talk because we can’t see each other getting hurt this way… Can’t even run away because of his obligations towards his parents..

    Should I stop talking to him? Or should i just let all this be and talk to him till we feel better?

    I cannot get past all this and it is affecting my career a lot..I feel better and am able to study when he talks to me.. but when he doesn’t I just can’t focus on my studies..I don’t want to be dependent on him this way.. I do want to sincerely work on my career..

     

    #211451
    Michelle
    Participant

    I’ve learned that family “pull” is very, very strong in India. There is a sense of obligation towards parents and what they want over someone’s own happiness. I don’t necessarily agree with this. I, like you, envision a world where EVERYONE can be happy and where mother-in-laws aren’t in competition with the daughter-in-laws but that is simply not the case. The mother-in-law has positioned herself as a queen in this scenario and I believe she would do anything to maintain that position. You would always be second. In fact, I believe you would be treated worse than second based on what she’s done already. The woman is a terrible person. I hope you realize that you are worth better than that.

    I imagine the parents are probably holding things over your exes head, such as money, status, etc. This is very manipulative on their part, and not very loving towards their own son, but it goes towards getting what they want which is power. I pity that your ex may also never know love and courage but that is his choice. He is choosing what is easy.

    You can make your own choices now.

    Personally,  I would cease communication with him. This will be difficult but the more you cling to something that could never be, the more it will prolong the pain. If you talk daily now, transition to talking maybe once a week. If you talk once a week, transition to once a month … I feel the longer you can go without talking to him, the easier it will be for you to move on.

    Again, I realize this isn’t easy. I have been there myself. But for your own wellbeing, it is essential. I would recommend spending time with your family now (they sound like wonderful people, truly) and perhaps exploring your hobbies or building your career. I am happy that you intend to make this a focus. Strong learning will lead to a strong career which will lead to a strong woman who will REALLY be able to stand up for herself in the future.

    My main concern for you right now is what happened to me. I was dating an Indian who strung me along. I then discovered his parents were trying to arrange a marriage for him so I dumped him. Two months later he got married. This was incredibly painful for me and I have spent a significant amount of time having it affect my life, mental health, confidence, other relationships, etc. I don’t want to see you in that position where you continue to communicate with him, believing that there might be a future, only to have something similar happen. It can destroy you if you let it and you don’t deserve that.

    I have to go to work but will be back on later if you need to chat more.

    #211453
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear VJ:

    Regarding your past pregnancy, I don’t think you owe this information to anyone. If such pregnancy prevented you from having children in the future, then you would  owe that information, that you are unable to have children,  to any man you meet who showed interest in you for marriage and children.

    But if you feel the urge to disclose it to a future boyfriend, then disclose it, but make sure he is trustworthy to not spread that piece of news, to keep it private.

    Regarding your boyfriend’s mother, my understanding is that this is probably a behavioral pattern on her part throughout her adulthood, to find fault in others, to  claim that she is disrespected, and no amount of apologies will satisfy her. You can expect this to continue.

    It reads that your boyfriend is heavily influenced by her and therefore her behavior will continue to distress you, hurt you and hurt your future children. Not hurting future children is a very important value to me.

    Clearly, you are intensely attached to your boyfriend. Having him in your life brings you comfort on one hand and distress on the other, hence the conflict. Thing is that having him in your life means having him and his mother in your life. The two, him and his mother are not separate entities. At times he is a bit separate and you may have hope, but soon enough he is likely to … reunite with her mentally and sort of…be her, yet again.

    He may be struggling, I am thinking, struggling between his loyalty to her and becoming his own person. Doesn’t read to me that his struggle will end any time soon, or at all. So much better for you if you remove yourself from his painful struggle.

    anita

    #211617
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi VJ,

    Your parents gave his parents a present they didn’t like and look how his mother reacted. Now imagine if you LIVED with her! NO. You cannot marry a man with a mother like this! The upset has nothing to do with the gift. It was an upset waiting to happen. It could have been anything that would set her off. This woman is nuts.

    Guess what.. I prophesy that he will remain single forever because of her.

    Let him cling to his mother. If you were Western I’d tell you to date other people. Since you are Indian, tell him that you are ready for your parents to look for other potential husbands for you. This will make him either come to his senses and commit to you or solidify his commitment to his original family.

    Time for everyone to be free.

    Best,

    Inky

    • This reply was modified 6 years, 11 months ago by Inky.
    #211691
    Vidya
    Participant

    Hi VJ,

    I have read your story and I am an Indian also, so I understand your dilemma. Its difficult decision but RUN from this guy and this family. Even if you will try, try and try then also there is good chance that you will end up in divorce which will still be better than misery they all will create around your life if you choose to spend your life with him. In case of divorce, his family will gulp all dowry, and if his family is making big deal about engagement gift they would always want more and more. Your own family doesn’t deserve to be party to your mistakes. Yes it will hurt, but better grieve today than clouding your life with grief — entering dysfunctional family. Also, my mother suffers from depression and my mother’s illness and affected our life considerably. If you choose to persist in marrying the guy, be aware that your life will be affected enormously.

    From what I understand you have job — focus on that. Please don’t ruin your career. Your career will only uplift you from this messy situation. Study and move forward. Give yourself time but ask this guy to get lost. Also, current time is not to think about future relation — what your future relationship/others will think, but think how you are going to overcome the grief and move on. Show courage and have faith in God. Not all is lost.

    Take care,

    V

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