Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe this is a dumb question, but how do you take a bucket bath?
Fill a bucket with water. Put a plastic or steel container in and keep pouring water on yourself, lathering yourself up in between pours and then washing it off.
Anonymous wrote:If I was there I'd be eating mutton biriyani every day.
Anonymous wrote:Surely you’re not just sitting around the house all day, OP? Organize a trip to see the local attractions. Do some shopping. Get yourself a jamdani sari.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oookay.
Consider talking to your husband when you come back. Let him know that you wish you were better prepared.
Having to bathe out of the bucket is not the end of the world. Not eating chicken nuggets is not the end of the world. Being constantly cold would be, so keep your list reasonable, and see how you can work around it, the next time you go. Maybe he goes first and you join him later, to keep your portion of the trip shorter. Tell him you want to see the country, not just sit at home. This will automatically get you to places where you will have access to different food, shopping, etc.
And unless you have very young kids, work on expanding their palate. There are things you can do here to make your next trip easier.
OP here. Have you done this for a MONTH? I think not. Our kids are very young, and we were advised that boxed food would be better. We all got super sick during the last trip. Please let me know what we can do to make our trip easier... I planned how to make this trip easier for months.. there is only so much you can do. His family doesn't live close to a big city.. there isn't a lot of shopping and restaurants around... going out to restaurants and using a supermarket is a newer concept here...
I hear ya OP.
I think bathing out of a bucket 🪣 for an entire month would equate a second form of hell for me!
I would be so angry that your husband never cautioned you on the way things are in his country…I would definitely discuss it w/him because it was disrespectful of him to not tell you these things.
What do you think Americans in the us did 150 years ago?
We have become so soft as a people and nation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Visiting anyone for a month is difficult.
Living in a poor rural area is difficult, more so if you don't know language and local culture.
Living with In-laws is difficult.
Traveling with young kids and uncooperative spouse is difficult.
I do have some questions.
Why you didn't visit before marrying him?
Why you didn't research and prepare yourself?
Treat it as an adventure. Next time tell DH that either trip has to be shorter or he needs to let you pack accordingly.
At least you've good internet service and in-laws are nice.
I'm also from a third world country though middle class and from a big city, even i would have problems living in a poor rural town with a DH who is not helping find solutions because he is trying to prove something to his people.
You can have these discussions with DH later,for now make lemonade with your given lemons.
Your premise is incorrect. She is not in a poor rural town. This is not her first trip. She is in a fairly large town with all sorts of amenities available to her. Her ILs are not poor. Based on the pictures posted, they're at least middle class. She seems to have good internet. She claims she's lying awake hungry, not because there is no food, but because she refuses to eat it. And who the hell takes an electric pancake maker to a country with incompatible voltage requirements, when all you really need is a griddle (which, any home that makes parathas will have)? Either OP is incredibly stupid, or a troll. I suspect the latter.
Op here as an AMERICAN it feels poor. I am freezing cold. There aren't any heaters here (not even space heaters) and the door is open all day and windows are open all night. It's very hard to take a bucket bath when you are cold. I think a lot of the people posting replies are originally from South Asia or grew up with immigrant parents and took lots of trips abroad. I will be okay but living like this for a month is really hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This can’t be real life
Seems real to me. I first went to South Asia in the 1980s and it's much more modern now than it was then but there are still situations like OP is describing. I have found there are two types of American: those who enjoy the South Asian lifestyle, and those who are freaked-out by it. OP is the latter. It's too bad she is like that because rural Bengal is very nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Visiting anyone for a month is difficult.
Living in a poor rural area is difficult, more so if you don't know language and local culture.
Living with In-laws is difficult.
Traveling with young kids and uncooperative spouse is difficult.
I do have some questions.
Why you didn't visit before marrying him?
Why you didn't research and prepare yourself?
Treat it as an adventure. Next time tell DH that either trip has to be shorter or he needs to let you pack accordingly.
At least you've good internet service and in-laws are nice.
I'm also from a third world country though middle class and from a big city, even i would have problems living in a poor rural town with a DH who is not helping find solutions because he is trying to prove something to his people.
You can have these discussions with DH later,for now make lemonade with your given lemons.
Your premise is incorrect. She is not in a poor rural town. This is not her first trip. She is in a fairly large town with all sorts of amenities available to her. Her ILs are not poor. Based on the pictures posted, they're at least middle class. She seems to have good internet. She claims she's lying awake hungry, not because there is no food, but because she refuses to eat it. And who the hell takes an electric pancake maker to a country with incompatible voltage requirements, when all you really need is a griddle (which, any home that makes parathas will have)? Either OP is incredibly stupid, or a troll. I suspect the latter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely sounds like India
Do they have pizza restaurants in India?
Which world are you living in? In my village, besides pizza places, there are fancy ice cream parlors too, a 20 minute drive away. Many homes have at least 1 Western toilet.
Granted they are not that clean in restaurants and such but then again I hate using the mall bathrooms here too.
Which world do you think I'm living in?
The world of the clueless.
Nobody has ever approached me with a list of American style restaurants in India or Bangladesh and I've never heard of pizza as a common food there. I know you're trying to insult me but you're just kind of a jerk.
You are just embarrassing yourself. Domino’s pizza has been around in India since 1996, to name one. There are plenty of local places that serve pizza. Just because you haven’t heard of it doesn’t mean anything other than you’re ignorant.
Op here. I wanted to go to Dominos yesterday when we went to Dhaka and dh wouldn't let me because they support Israel. So instead of crossing the street and getting it when had to cross dangerous interactions with cars driving right into me. I don't support the war either but it's not the end of the world to buy a pizza from Dominos. There aren't any American chains where we are now.
Anonymous wrote:This can’t be real life