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Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "Vent about marrying someone from a very underdeveloped country "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]O [b]they realize a marriage with a white chick won't last if they constantly act like it's my way or the highway.[/b] [/quote] x1000. Many Americans women don't realize how good they have it with American men. The kind of treatment you get from an American man, in most of South Asia or Africa, you will never be treated in an equal manner the way an American man will treat you. And despite this most marriages end up failing. I am always amazed when I see the guys here doing stuff like grocery shopping, chores at home, etc. , as an African woman I am envious. [/quote] Funny you say this because my parents immigrated from India in the 70s - same deal, wife does EVERYTHING. I remember being a kid in the 90s and my mom STILL being mystified because she went to the grocery store on a Saturday morning and there were so many MEN there doing full cartloads of shopping for the family and some men even brought the 4 year old along. LOL to her that was the most AMAZING thing because to most Indian guys who immigrated back then and brought over an Indian wife going to the grocery store is something you did once in a year as a "favor" to your wife because you were out of milk and desperately needed another gallon and she couldn't get to the store; and even then that "favor" was very much remembered as he'd later be like - uh make sure you get enough milk for our child next time. Because making sure his child had enough to eat was not dad's problem.[/quote] Wow!! No one in my vast Indian community in this area is married to such an Indian man. I wonder if it is actually a SES issue rather than the issue of a group? People who came from well educated and fairly prosperous families in India have a very different mindset. I immigrated in 1990's. My DH has always done more than me at home, regardless of when I was a WOHM or a SAHM. I have always paid very well to get domestic help - cleaners, landscapers, cooks - even on very modest salary. The reason is that DH and I have heavily prioritized our time spent with our children and essentially we are buying our time back when we outsource time consuming domestic chores. [/quote] It sounds like you live in a bubble https://www.indiatoday.in/amp/diu/story/less-than-10-percent-indian-men-involved-household-chores-survey-1731199-2020-10-13[/quote] No. As I said, it is purely a SES issue. In India, everyone in our circles and in our family have daily maids for chores. Each household has a daily cook who comes once or twice and cooks for the family or guests. My nephews who are single young men working in big cities and living with flatmates have daily cooks who come in the morning before they leave for office and make their breakfast, pack their lunch and make dinner for them and keep it in the refrigerator. In US, we cut down expenses on other things and paid for cleaners and landscapers. Now we can afford help when entertaining and pay for cooks, servers and bartenders when we are entertaining. People may balk at the cost of domestic help in India or US, but, help is available in both countries if you are willing to pay a fair wage. [/quote] Yes, and only a tiny percentage of people in the US, regardless of ethnic background, can afford this level of domestic help therefore, as previously stated, you obviously live in a bubble that is not representative of most Indian immigrants and your feigned shock in your prior post ā Wow!! No one in my vast Indian community in this area is married to such an Indian man. ā just makes you sound ridiculous and out of touch. Iām betting you also post in the money and finances forum wondering how families can possibly survive on less than 250k per year. [/quote] No. Any Indian family with 150K HHI in this area can live a very comfortable life. And yes, no Indian man that I know in the US is not helping with running of the household, especially if the wife is working and they have kids. As I said - it is probably a SES issue and the kind of families these Indians have come from. Indians are usually quite educated, bilingual, employable and are the highest HHI group in the US. The kind of Indians you are describing sound like someone out of "The Namesake". Typical Boomers who came in the 60s and 70s. The kinds who used to get excited to see Dhania Patta in the grocery stores. Lazy people do not make it big in this country. [/quote]
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