![]() |
Without knowing everything, I think it would be foolish to disregard all the concerns you family have raised. Don't forget your family was with you since the day you were born, so it's reasonable to assume they know you the best. Unless you can work this issue out between the two parties, which it doesn't look like it will. I would probably side with your family just because in this case they are sincerely looking out for you and your interest. |
sorry for being noob. what does SO stand for? |
Quote:
|
its YOUR life. Fuck what anyone else has to say. Live for YOURSELF. |
My parents were against me being with my ex which was a contributing factor to why we broke up. It's easy to say "It's your life, you date who you want" when there are family conflicts going on. If your family is looking down on the SO, how do you think that makes them feel? Turn it around, if your SO's family looked down on you how would you feel? In my situation, I felt her unhappiness largely came from my parents due to some serious conflicting financial decisions and values. Unfortunate as it was, family tie will never go away no matter how strong the love may be. Their ideas were planted into my head and as much as I tried to ignore it, I couldn't. I kept being with her until we could no longer sustain the burden which in turn hurt us both more than if we were to break it off earlier in our lives. Even though I broke her heart telling her the truth, I felt it was the best thing I could do for her to find someone who is more compatible with. It would ease her suffering and my own. I'm still hurting now and my relationship with my parents has never been the same since. I live on my own, make my own money, survive on my on hard work and I'm pretty independent from my parents but I could never truly break ties and completely ignore what they say to me. I don't know if it's genetic or what but no matter how independent you might think you are, parents and family will always have some influence on you. Sometimes it might be an ego thing where you want to show your family how awesome you are but if they look down on you and your SO, can your ego take it? I wouldn't give the OP so much flak about making his own decisions as I understand where he's coming from. Unless you were completely disowned and abandoned by family, I will be so bold as to say that it's impossible to not be influenced by family opinion. The moment your brain processes and interprets what someone is saying, the idea will become a part of your thoughts even if it's something you don't accept. There are two ways you would react, a) reject the idea and find ways to disprove it (ie, date them anyways) or b) accept and bail. In the end staying with her knowing that the family will never accept her as who she is will always tear two lovers apart. Look at Romeo and Juliet, classic tale of two conflicting families. In the end the only way that they could be together is to die together. Family drama is the worst kind of drama, even if you ask your family to chill the fuck out, it very rarely works out with all the preconceptions and stubborn-as-fuck parents. Sometimes they should just learn to shut their fucking traps. |
I think it's worth noting that, if EVERY SINGLE PERSON in your family thinks its a bad idea, maybe it is. It's possible that that they're all completely racist, but maybe they do see something you don't. Maybe your SO is actually using/abusing you in some way. When you're in the relationship, as you stated, it's hard to see clearly. I'm not justifying what they're doing, or their basis, but if there is not a single person who supports you, you have to at least be aware of the possibility that you might actually be acting naively. My suggestion is to find a close friend and get their honest opinion about your relationship. Don't just post on RS looking for the affirmation that your family isn't giving you. |
You're much younger and have experienced less than they have. I would listen to what they say with an open mind. If it is just purely based on race and the hatred towards that, then they're not putting up much of an argument. But, if they're providing examples as to why they think she's taking advantage of you, then you should pay more attention. Do you spoil your gf? Are you rich? Is your gf a gold digger? |
This is a reply from the Anonymous member. Its a big one, so stay tuned kids Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
1. Wrong. There's a lot of couples, and even some married ones who are in a situation where parents or in-laws dislike (openly or quietly) their son/daughter in laws. They're doing fine and neither partner regrets the decision being with said partner. Like everything mentioned in the first page... just need to grow some balls. 2. Adulthood is about taking control of your own life and being responsible for it. Yes your parents can have an opinion, but as long as you're independent from them, it'll be just that; an opinion (no matter how strong of an opinion it is.) Whether your choices are the right ones or the wrong ones, adulthood is about being responsible for your OWN choices; not your parents. 3. Just because you're living on your own, and earning an income doesn't make one independent. Hell, I know of lots of people my age, who's independence is financed by their parents (inheriting a family car, downpayment for a condo/home). Or if not that, independence made possible by parents (living at home til post-secondary education is completed; parent paid tuition; parent paid student expenses ie. car, ins, etc.) I hate to be racist but I see this a lot in the Chinese community, which unfortunately in RS, is majority. And when one is THAT indebted to their parents, then I can kinda see why even in "independence," parents still have quite the controlling influence over their kids. To the OP: That being said, if you're torn about choosing "your happiness" over your "family's happiness." Choose yours. I don't care about mama & papa complexes that we see around here so commonly, but your partner is the person you'll be lying beside with every night, and waking up to every morning hopefully for the rest of your life. Don't settle for #2s, or plan B's when what you want is #1 or plan A (aka, what you want, your plan, what you want in a woman). And besides, its really time to grow up. I mean c'mon, we already view it as childish when you have your parents picking out your clothes for you. It's moreso down right embarrassing if they're picking out your girlfriends too. Don't be that kind of a "man" if you can even call that "manly." So Man up. You're not the first person in the world that has had to make a decision against their parents wishes. It won't be the end of the world (unless you're weak inside); I promise. |
Quote:
3. A lot of those people you know aren't independent then. The fact that their independence is financed by parents is contradictory in itself. How can you classify them as independent if their indepdence is dependent on their parents money :fulloffuck:. Where's that picture of the philosoraptor?? Besides that, you missed my point; my point was that no matter how independent you think you might be from your parents you will have at least some sliver of their values. I used myself as an example where I am detatched enough not so much as to even ask my parents for advice anymore. As bad as it sounds, Google is my best source of advice. It's my upbringing and my parents values that were passed on to me that is the influence here. Unless you've never seen them in your life, they will have some sort of influence on you. This applies to #2 as well. It's easy to say grow balls, but in the end if your parents taught you how to speak, taught you how to wipe your own ass, how to eat, how to not kill someone, how to do well in life, those are your parents in your head. |
Quote:
No, mine was not an ego thing. It was simply looking at something in a different perspective. Parents were one factor. She never wanted to see my parents because my parents quietly didn't like her. She didn't really want to push through and we were living the moment rather than planning on how family would react later on. In the end, this lead to other things that spiralled downwards. I won't get into the nitty gritty details but for the most part her goals in life were not aligned with mine at all. We were on two different wavelengths when it came to planning things out. If you and your SO are aligned in your goals and your family's worries aren't warranted, then it should be your call if your SO makes you happiest. But if your family is seeing that you're being taken advantage of then that's when you should consider looking beyond the box. |
Quote:
And what do you mean it doesn't make being together easy? How often do you see your parents as an "Adult"? Like weekly? What do you do you still have your parents do your laundry for you? C'mon dude, when you're an adult, you don't spend a great deal of time with your parents, especially when you have a partner, and later on a family of yourself to take care of. Say even if you meet only a monthly basis due to birthdays, and other occasions... are those 12 days going to ruin the entire 365 days in a year you share with your partner? Are those 12 days or say 24 (twice a month) days in an entire year so severe that the 365 days your woman makes you happy is not worth it? Get real yo :lol Quote:
Quote:
Because of the OP's upbringing does that mean he's obliged to respect his parents values no matter how conservative or traditionalist it is? And I'm using those words euphemistically. Are you seriously justifying that? |
Eastern collective conformity vs Western single minded speciality. choose which life you want to live. your family is obviously the former. the two don't mix. choose your path. there's no middle ground. there's no wrong, there's no right. both paths u take you have to make great sacrifice. "give up" your family, or give up your SO. of course this is to do with racism, but that doesnt matter because it's probably there to stay. it's to do with expectations. your family expected you to have a different outcome, and you have strayed far from that outcome lol. whatever, just let the relationship run. time will determine this, not you. you will get to a point where you can't stand this any more, and end it. or you wont. you say you love her now, but who says you'll love her 2 years from now lol. what if you meet someone better. just let it run its course. |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:43 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
SEO by vBSEO ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.
Revscene.net cannot be held accountable for the actions of its members nor does the opinions of the members represent that of Revscene.net