Writing Feedback /
Ships Ahoy -- floundering marriages [25]
(This thread is getting pretty hard core amongst you gentlemen. I am compelled to present the opposite sex's POV here.Please excuse the intrusion Lawllll!!)
What I first posted (and lost in the Great Eternal Nether-virtual land where no Firefox BACK button can retrieve) was to ask Rajiv if the analogy of climate difference between civilizations (northern western cool vs. Indian southern hot) was how he/you perceived the evolution of the marriage institution in the West?
I think it would be safe to say that climate plays an important role - though hard to trace - in shaping the culture of a place and its people.
From your first essay, there were some excellent attempts at "enlightened" understanding:
Like I said these ships are our individual marriages and the turbulent waters, the environment we must sail through. The question is what we all are doing wrong and have no common knowledge of ?
This was one-sidedly negative. It would help to also examine what "we" are doing right and doing consciously despite the "turbulent waters beneath and all that lurks there" to present a balanced perspective. However, this glimmer of balanced enlightenment faded fast as the essay became more one-sided and more negative:
Where did things go wrong ? From the time when after marriage they did not commit to their bond. Instead chose the slippery slope of tasting an over-abundance of independence.
What is "over" abundance - compared to what?
Once you have made a matrimonial pact, you need to move to the next stage. Of preserving that, of doing everything you can to hold it together. It becomes your prime purpose and duty. Men have accepted this fact, and more naturally accept their marriage, quickly moving into the next stage of nourishing the family and protecting and sheltering it.
Marriage is a legal contractual status of mutual dependency, mutual sharing of property and responsibilities. Traditionally, women have accepted this with much more at stake (i.e. dependency) than men up to now. I don't see how you can imply that only men protect the family. So this is where your essay failed to deliver a strong closing argument. It just ends in nowhereland.
This lopsided perspective was confirmed (and exacerbated) in your personal post of today. I do not mean to denigrate you in any way, nor is this meant to be male-bashing. At worse, please consider this as an open dialogue with a female help columnist. At best, I hope this exchange can shed some "light" on your suffering or serve as gentle psychotherapy.
My feedback on your story is that clearly, you feel insecure... because:
1) your wife's career is surpassing yours
2) the prospect of dependency is daunting to say the least. Not only are you negative about your wife, you are highly distrustful. Do I detect some hostility rearing its ugly head here:
But now introduce a game-changer, forcing me to take the fall. Thereafter, she just keeps the upper hand for the next ten years and more. No need for promising anything in return. Just keep me hanging there.
3) she is not dependent on you. It sounds like she has family in the US and does not need to return to India where traditional male supremacy and female dependency may overrule/override and obliterate her career prospects. Do you feel insecure because you do not have this option and if you did, what would you do?
And when her assignment is over, she'll go back to US amongst her other family.
4) you find housework demeaning...
Some hard questions:
1) why do you have a trust (or distrust) problem? what are the basic signs that you are seeing (another man, less affection from your wife?)
2) have you taken any steps to diagnose the health of your male-female relationship? how is the communication between you and your spouse? Are you good friends, do you enjoy being together, do you laugh and play etc. etc. together?
Some easier questions for you:
1) where would you prefer your girls to grow up?
2) could your job prospects in India provide a better future and overall family well-being happiness for your entire family?