Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read several pages of this thread, about 10 of them, and I just gave up. I cannot believe the number of posters who are dismissing the original poster. I read all her posts up to where I stopped and she has some very valid complaints. She's venting online. However, since her in-laws seem to like her, I am certain she's putting on a good face for them. I suppose I'm defending her because I can see myself doing the same. A month long vacation in the circumstances the OP describes would be difficult. Kudos to her for doing it. All you guys saying that she has to enjoy it, get over yourselves.
I just waded through the whole thread. Yes, there is a lot of WTF to pick apart here, but one thing that stood out to me is that OP genuinely seems to like her DH's family and does note positive things when they happen (her kids are having fun, she's going dress shopping with SIL). I think she's trying hard to be game and go along with it, and mostly venting here. Fair enough, and hang in there OP (and thanks for all the interesting photos!)
Anonymous wrote:I read several pages of this thread, about 10 of them, and I just gave up. I cannot believe the number of posters who are dismissing the original poster. I read all her posts up to where I stopped and she has some very valid complaints. She's venting online. However, since her in-laws seem to like her, I am certain she's putting on a good face for them. I suppose I'm defending her because I can see myself doing the same. A month long vacation in the circumstances the OP describes would be difficult. Kudos for her for doing it. All you guys saying that she has to enjoy it, get over yourselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, thanks for teaching me all about Bangladesh. I never want to visit now.
As if it wasn’t obvious from the beginning…
Op here. Visiting as a tourist may be fun. You can stay in a nice hotel. It will be a cultural shock to navigate the traffic in Dhaka. Now that I know what I do about developing countries I'm not very interested in traveling to any. In the past, I have been to several European countries and Peru. I loved Peru and I absolutely loved the food there too. I stayed with an international friend I met in undergrad. My stomach has always been weak so I think that has a big impact on traveling. It's very unpleasant to get sick on vacations. I never got sick when I visited Europe. I think it's tricky when vacations have been different and you change to doing something traveling to Bangladesh. We haven't traveled much because we save for this trip. We save PTO and money. We mostly do small trips in the US. Maybe in some ways, I am resentful that we don't do typical family vacations like going to FL for a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line: You need to take time to know who you are marrying and establish open empathetic communication and understanding before jumping on to marriage wagon and popping out children.
If your relationship is worth it, together both spouses can make one month back home manageable and fun. Magic word: Together
But it's not OP's home. One month is a lot of time.
That's right but she married an immigrant, he would want to go visit his home and take kids to bond with grandparents.
They just have to be able to empathize with each other and make it work for both. May be go one year, invite his parents next year or just he goes and skip year after then all go together the next year for two weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, thanks for teaching me all about Bangladesh. I never want to visit now.
As if it wasn’t obvious from the beginning…
Op here. Visiting as a tourist may be fun. You can stay in a nice hotel. It will be a cultural shock to navigate the traffic in Dhaka. Now that I know what I do about developing countries I'm not very interested in traveling to any. In the past, I have been to several European countries and Peru. I loved Peru and I absolutely loved the food there too. I stayed with an international friend I met in undergrad. My stomach has always been weak so I think that has a big impact on traveling. It's very unpleasant to get sick on vacations. I never got sick when I visited Europe. I think it's tricky when vacations have been different and you change to doing something traveling to Bangladesh. We haven't traveled much because we save for this trip. We save PTO and money. We mostly do small trips in the US. Maybe in some ways, I am resentful that we don't do typical family vacations like going to FL for a week.
Anonymous wrote:Ability to get credit and loans helped artificially raise living standards in developed countries but increased mental stress.
Anonymous wrote:OP is American born and raised SouthAsian?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bottom line: You need to take time to know who you are marrying and establish open empathetic communication and understanding before jumping on to marriage wagon and popping out children.
If your relationship is worth it, together both spouses can make one month back home manageable and fun. Magic word: Together
But it's not OP's home. One month is a lot of time.
Anonymous wrote:India, Nepal, parts of Vietnam, Central Asia, Pakistan, Ethiopia - those are my likely guesses for lesser developed countries that are cold right now.
OP - how long have you been married? How come you haven’t learned enough of the language to manage a walk outside the gates of the family home?
I wouldn’t want to do this with kids but I’m a white woman from the Midwest and have lived for months at a time, successfully on my own, in places where I didn’t speak the language and didn’t have reliable running water or electricity (Uganda, Ethiopia and Cambodia).