Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As for your career, if you're this far along in years and can't manage to work your way past these hardship posts, that's your own failing and perhaps, rightly or wrong, she expected better.
PP, out of curiosity, are you FS or military? Do you really think it works this way? You do your best to bid on the posts that are best for your family and your career needs, but the "needs of the service" will always come first. It is a hard balancing act sometimes. However, I feel DW never really thinks about the exact characteristics of a post of assignment she wants, i.e. am a I willing to trade off a cushy place in Western Europe for a hardship assignment with good schools and great job opportunities, or do I should want to laise around the post going shopping, getting my manicure done, etc. If DW tells me that employment is her priority, then I think she should be looking with me at the posts with good employment opportunities and not so much focused on a Paris or a Rome that has none.
And, FWIW, I have made decisions for years now that were what she wanted and it generally hasn't helped in the getting promoted and moving up category.
Anonymous wrote:As for your career, if you're this far along in years and can't manage to work your way past these hardship posts, that's your own failing and perhaps, rightly or wrong, she expected better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Russia. DW chose not to come. Her choice.
Foreign Service hardship tours can be 2 -3 years. This Fall's bidding list includes, for example:
Lagos - 3 years
Chengdu - 2 years
Chennai - 2 year
Guangzhou - 3 years
Hanoi - 3 years
HCM City - 3 years
Mumbai - 3 years
The list goes on. I've only counted posts with a 20 % or higher differential. Lagos is 25% plus a 15% Service Need Differential. Places like AIP countries are 1 year tours that are too dangerous for families. I would go to any of those three for a year before Lagos. Otherwisw, I will virtually go anywhere.
DW seems to think a career is somehow limited to Canada and Western Europe.
Yeah I got it OP, she is one of those spouses who wants to climb the easy ladder. She prefers to go to the luxury posts - Paris, London, Prague etc... I've come across a lot of these princess in my time. World wide availability does not apply to them. But I think the reason why she is squirreling away money may be because she's afraid you might call her one day and tell her you've found yourself a Russian beauty and want a divorce. There's a risk when you let your husband go on unaccompanied tours, particularly in places like Eastern Europe and Asia. If insecurity is causing her to steal money from the family that is a separate issue than the backup system.
Anonymous wrote:Well, then she can leave.
Anonymous wrote:Dude - you are giving out WAY too much information online. I think you sound like the childish one.
And I doubt you'll have a family to return to with that attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
If you want to salvage what you can, you have to seriously tell your wife that your marriage is in trouble, and establish ground rules. Her backing out of choosing a country is really immature and silly, but points to a rejection of your lifestyle that you have to consider. In other words, overlook her methods for a minute to actually look at her motivations - this is not a happy woman! I suggest you do something about that. Therapy? Meds for depression, if that is it for her? Eventually, a career change for you? When are you definitely coming back to a stable position in the US?
You've been putting your head in the sand for years. Do something.
Why isn't it our lifestyle? I was doing this when DW met me. Did she think I would quit? If so, that has never been an expressed or realistic expectation. I am 10 years out from earliest retirement age - 55 - and still have one DD to get through college. In fact, I am really thinking when DD hits college I will need to go to some real sh**tholes just for the money - both to pay for college and to double up on retirement savings.
In our career with the FS, I don't think there is any place we have been that is truly bad. In 17 years of service, we have been to Russia, Ukraine, Ethiopia, Kenya and Korea. Kenya, IMHO, was the best place from lifestyle, education and work standpoint, but I left that to pursue other opportunities in Korea. As I am a fluent Russian speaker, my value added is in Russia or one of the FSU countries. She once asked me, "Why didn't you study French? Then we could be in Paris or Brussels?" Or Ouagadougou or Bangui or Dakar?Plus as an undergrad choosing a language to study really was dictated by what was in demand at the time, and frankly French and Spanish speakers are a dime a dozen. Speakers of harder languages - Asian, African or Slavic - are not.
She's ahd it with you regardless of how exciting you think you and your lifestyle are.
Realistically, perhaps the road to Paris or Brussels, in the end, comes through Kabul.