Your example 1 and example 2 and two completely different scenarios. The ring thing is frankly ludicrous. Why are you pinning all your hopes and dreams about what you think your marriage will be onto this one piece of jewelry? Honestly, if you've been drilling into him from day 1 for four years how over the top important this ring is to you, you're lucky he didn't ditch you back then. That would scare the crap out of me if I were a guy. Honestly, how high maintenance can you get? If a ring is that important to you, then you should be with him when he buys it. It seems pretty clear that he put a LOT of effort into getting you what you wanted while also making it special and something from him (which is what an engagement ring should be -- not some carbon copy made to your exact specifications -- you should look down at it and think about the effort he put into it, not the effort YOU put into it). But he's also a guy, and the two rings probably look identical to him. The chocolates thing is different. You had no expectations about them until he raised them and then didn't follow through. Does he do that a lot? If it just happened the one time, I don't see the big deal. He was probably busy with work and maybe it was just an offhand comment and he forgot all about it while you were all squee-ing on the inside about French chocolates but he didn't realize that you had gotten all worked up about them. If this kind of thing happens a lot, then it's a big deal. My DH used to be far too casual with the words that come out of his mouth. e.g., check is in the mail, your mothers day present is on its way, I'll be there in five minutes. These sound like little things, but after five years together and you realize you can't trust a thing that comes out of his mouth, it's a big problem. Especially when you have kids and he starts doing it to them. |
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I hated my ring initially, but I never told my DH. Over 8 years later I am in love with my ring. It reminds me of when he proposed and that happy day. I never told him I didn't like it because I didn't want to sour the memory of him proposing.
But I think you two need to focus more on premarital counseling than a ring. A ring means very little when you think of all the possible issues that arise over time in a marriage. |
I agree that the 2 rings look different; however I wouldn't call the 2nd one cheap looking. Sheeesh. |
^^ I meant to add that the 2 rings do look different to me but that to a guy (or even most people) they are the same.. |
I agree that if you pointed out the *exact* ring he gave you as one you didn't like that is problematic. And if there are other disappointments, well that may really be telling you something. If your gut is saying you are disappointed, you will be now and later, whether it seems rational or not. So you should move on. Maybe life will tell you that you made a hasty decision, but it's probably something you need to learn the hard way. I also advise that if these rings are so special you should tell the next guy exactly what you want, down the the URL, and be honest that it's a quirk for you that you are hung up about and that you'll be more flexible about the wedding, where you live and other things. He can take it or leave it (and you can take or leave his strengths and weaknesses) and be happier for it. But please do return the ring when you break up with this guy. You won't be wearing it anyways. |
PP here again. I should say though that realistically, I'm guessing he couldn't tell the difference between all the rings you showed him and you think this is the one you showed him but it's actually something else and while he tried, he guessed wrong. Either way, the fact that you are hung up on this insanity really says that you just aren't that into him. Save both of yourselves some time. Move along. And I agree with others, you need a break before trying again. Life is going to deal you bigger lemons that this so figure out the important stuff before you blame it on something so silly as the virtually invisible minutiae of an engagement ring. |
| You're focused on the wrong things.....change your priorities or end up divorced and unhappy later. |
Yup. OP is juvenile. |
I am amazed that crazy bitches like this get married while decent women can't get a date. Men totally deserve their crappy marriages. |
| Ok I'm actually into jewelry and those settings look completely different. I agree that the second looks cheaper. A nice delicate halo costs more money. Look at pricescope, people pay a big premium for a good jeweler to get the right look. It would drive me nuts if I wanted a halo to get one with gaps. Basically it comes down to this, just tell him you would like it reset and to be involved because sorry the gaps drive you nuts and see what he says. My husband would be ok with it and not hurt because he isn't a jeweler so his self esteem isn't based on a ring design!! |
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They're both ugly and trendy.
So there's that. |
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Who really cares about the size & cost of other rings in your circle??
I assume you are no longer in high school, correct??! Your ring should represent the love your husband has toward you, the future the two of you will share together & your commitment to each other. If you cannot get over the tangible vs. the intangible of your ring, then it's time to re-think marrying this person. |
| OP, if you really want to save your relations and if you really care about that stupid halo, this is what I would do. Find the jewerler who can reset the ring the way you want, pay by yourself, never tell the husband. He would never see the difference, and both of you will be happy in the end. Good luck. |
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| OP I won't say you are ridiculous because my e-ring mattered to me and we chose it together (I had to wear it every day so he wanted me to love it) HOWEVER, you gotta get over the fact that you wanted a bezel set and you got a prong set. That is some dancing on the head of a pin-type stuff that will drive you mad. |