I live in a foreign country with a foreign man and we have a small child. I feel so depressed and I'm so "under the slipper" right now that I can't change the situation. One summer day I met my husband, soon after we lived together on his property, I started working in their family company together with my parents-in-law. Our relationship was great, we helped each other, we loved each other ... After 2 years together I got pregnant as planned. Then I began to feel alienated. My husband changed and stopped helping at home, my mother-in-law didn't even come to the hospital when I gave birth. She has been taking care of our child since she was almost 3 years old. Alone in a foreign country, with foreign people, without anyone to cancel me in the care of the child, my husband and the house, without anyone to even pay for the pain. My husband thinks he helps a lot at home, if he changes a diaper every few days and says he loves us. He goes out in the morning and comes home in the evening, after work, where he doesn't have to stay. I know it because we worked together there for a long time. He also has a hobby, which occupies him most of the weekends. My mother-in-law and sister-in-law have never expressed a desire to look after the little one, and my mother-in-law already has a grown child. They have servants and never cook, clean, tidy and never take care of their own children. My mother-in-law's children were raised by their grandmother and a maid, and my daughter-in-law by a maid and a 1-year-old kindergarten. They do not work, but only help from time to time in the family business. My mother-in-law is interested in her reputation, but her heart is empty. We haven't seen a gift from her, Zulva buys me on her behalf, I know that. Zalva, on the other hand, is constantly looking for an opportunity to quarrel and we have quarreled many times because she interferes everywhere, nothing that she is not competent enough. He is trying to force me to enroll my son in which kindergarten, to which pediatrician, at what time to get up and go to bed, and so on. I told her that when she started watching it, then I would give her the right to vote, but the woman still continues ... They think that when I'm not working I'm free all day and they wanted me to go back to work every day, but I managed to make it only Monday and Tuesday and take the little one with me to the office. For 3 years without a day off ... My husband and I have talked many times on these issues about his attitude and the attitude of his mother and sister, but alas for him I am the maid at home, who only complains and always runs away from conversation or he gets very nervous and scares me. I can't leave, because at the moment I can't be independent, first kindergartens, then time for work and income. All this is hellishly suppressed. I don't even know if I'm looking for advice from you, because I know that there is no way out, at least for now ....
1 thesinlair answered
See, it's not for you to have babysitters and mothers-in-law looking after your child. Your husband's behavior is also normal - in the West it is so among successful men - he provides you with financial stability, you look after your child. This is especially true in Catholic countries, but it is also true in general - women are for the family and the man for food. Only in post-communist countries do women work on an equal footing with men, grandmothers help and the like. You live in a different society, adjust - no one owes you. For example, it's time to take a maid, even a babysitter. Take a girl from Bulgaria or the former USSR countries like an Au Pair and watch your life, but a counselor - look for a job elsewhere, maybe on an hourly basis. You don't have to work otherwise - even women with small children who work are looked down upon. I also have a foreign man, but for the reasons you described, I persuaded him to live in Bulgaria and we have no problems. It is better for him to live here as a man than for me to de-emancipate myself in order to fall to the level of his country, but if you can't make him live in our country and have no business in our country, just adapt and do the best of the situation, instead of fighting with internal mills and spitting against the wind. There are so many solutions to your problem ... and at the age of 3 you start letting your child go to kindergarten, what kind of diapers are they chasing you with? Are you thinking of having a second or third child? In many countries it is mandatory. At least you came across a wealthy and intellectual family. Most Bulgarian women abroad are married either to other foreigners or to impossible men - primitive, beating, alcoholics and unfortunates. You hit a six in the lottery - what if you change your diaper yourself and look after your child. Is it bad? And the fact that you don't have staff is your problem. Fit! Everyone in the West has a cleaner or babysitter after a certain standard, but mothers-in-law and daughters-in-law do not deal with your problems - they have their own lives.