T
trustnotstress
Guest
I didn't ...say anything about attitudes you had in the original post, just talked about what worked for me.
I disagree: "I'm sure there were times where it was much easier for your husband to stop getting his degrees, yet he still has them. It means to me that he identified his motivator and made the choice to push through, even when it was easier to give up, even when it meant sacraficing free time, family time, what have you. It sounds like you've yet to do the same."
That is a comment on my attitudes and a judgement. My husband did his PhD and only did his PhD and enjoyed it. While he was doing his PhD I was working fulltime and studying fulltime yet still had more freedom than I have now to do the same. Yet apparently I've yet to make the same sacrifices as him. OK. We've both given in this family. I do not appreciate the implication I am unmotivated and unwilling to make sacrifices. My problem is my tendency to try to do everything 100%. And with some of the issues faced by my husband, if my taking a job puts stress on the family and he can't cope, guess who has to deal with the fallout of that too?
And things have changed since my first post. I was very confused about the situation and how to make everything work when I posted that. I've since worked through a lot of that and am no longer confused and more accepting that I simply can't do it all. I just feel my intentions in the post were very incorrectly read. That may have been my fault. Even my poor husband got judged and there is nothing to judge him for. He's a great man and very supportive.
I apologise for misinterpreting your post. Thank you for taking the time to share with me. I'm out of here.
Last edited:
Upvote
0