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How could my husband do this?

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  • #151748
    Lisa
    Participant

    My husband and I dated for 1 year and then decided we wanted to get married. He’s Indian and I’m not. His parents were against it. He started to fight with them constantly about marrying me. At some point, 1.5years into the relationship, his parents gave him an ultimatum: you either pick one of the girls we’ve picked out to marry, or we will disown you. So, he gave in to an engagement with an Indian girl of his parents’ choosing. He did not tell me any of this and continued to tell me that he was fighting with them for “us” and needed time. He was being distant at times and I could tell something was off but he insisted he still wanted the relationship and was trying to make it work with his parents. Finally, I got tired of waiting and broke up with him and cut off all communication. He said he felt so sad afterwards, that he gave that arranged relationship a true shot but just couldn’t do it cause he was in love with me. He finally convinced his parents to let him break it off and then he came back to me ready to get married. I forgave him. But sometimes I wonder, with the cultural piece, was this true cheating? Was it not being able to stand up to his parents? Was it conflict avoidance? What was going through his head that allowed him to go on arranged dates with a stranger while very much involved with me? How sick do you have to be to do that to 2 people?  Why didn’t the just tell me and break up with me? I feel like our iron clad transparent relationship now has a huge wrinkle in it. And despite his parents support, I’m still always insecure that they will try to undermine me if something in our marriage doesn’t go well. I appreciate any input from anyone that has dealt with something like this. I love him and I married him, but a year into the marriage, I’m still not over it…

    #151756
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Lisa:

    Interesting, there is another thread in progress right now about arranged marriages in India. There have been plenty on this website. You are a year into the marriage- of all the threads I read, this is the first where an unapproved marriage by parents took place. Congratulations!

    The following are your questions and my answers.

    “was this true cheating?”- I don’t think so. The pressure on the adult child by the parents, particularly in the traditional society of India, is very strong, intense. His compliance with them at one point is understandable.

    “Was it not being able to stand up to his parents? Was it conflict avoidance?”- again, do not underestimate the parental/ social pressure in Indian society. He did very well standing up to them. The proof is in the marriage.

    “What was going through his head that allowed him to go on arranged dates with a stranger while very much involved with me?”- he didn’t want to lose his parents’ approval. Since an early age, it was instilled in his brain that he is forever tied to his parents, that their wishes are his command. Again, this is the very first case I read about on this website (and there have been many) when a son/ daughter does go against their parents’ wishes and succeeds in changing their minds.

    “How sick do you have to be to do that to 2 people?”- You mean, how sick of his parents? Well, this is what Indian parents do, having very strong, lifetime, socially accepted positions on social castes and marriages.

    You wrote: “I feel like our iron clad transparent relationship now has a huge wrinkle in it.”- the wrinkle you are troubled by, I am impressed with. Reads to me that he worked very hard on getting their approval.

    “And despite his parents support, I’m still always insecure that they will try to undermine me if something in our marriage doesn’t go well.”- Have they given you any reason to fear that, since your marriage?

    anita

     

    #151884
    Lisa
    Participant

    Thank you for your well thought out reply Anita.

    No, his parents haven’t given me any reason to fear being undermined. But I obviously know that they were dead against our marriage and took such harsh measures to get him married off and keep us apart. So, in matters related to them, I always assume the worst cause I don’t think I’ve fully forgiven them for their behavior.

    It’s reassuring to hear that what my husband did was no easy feat. It makes me value it much much more. I guess not fully grasping the cultural piece (even though I’m trying!), prevents me from seeing his actions for the heroism they hold.

    I guess the only lingering fear I have is that is it possible for him to get caught up with trying to get his parents favor and approval in other matters of our life that he then has a tough time standing up to them in the future? Like about how to raise the kids, or whether or not his parents will live with us in the future. Or as our bond grows, will his ability to stand up to them more and more grow too?

    #151992
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Lisa:

    You are welcome. I would call your husband marrying you regardless of his parents’ strong disapproval, an act of heroism, absolutely. This heroism supports having hope that he will continue to stand up to them. After all, he did and he succeeded already.

    Pay attention, if you will, to the following: if and when you have children, it may seem to you that he is obeying his parents’ instructions regarding how to raise your children, but it may be his own beliefs that guide him, and they only happen to resemble his parents’, on this or that topic.

    Talk with him, honestly, openly and gently about how to raise your future children and about any other topic. Compare thoughts, feelings, positions on this and that on an ongoing basis. Communicate and keep communicating. The more you communicate well, the stronger your bond.

    You can talk about topics that are not relevant yet, for example the idea of his parents living with you. As long as a talk does not become aggressive, as long as the two of you keep aggression (arguing, fighting, insulting, blaming, accusing, etc.) out of the conversations, you are good. All topics are okay to be talked about.

    anita

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