Showing posts with label Unhappy in marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unhappy in marriage. Show all posts

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Notes on the F-Word: Victorian Values in 2010

It would be a decided slight to the women who actually endured Victorian Britain to suggest that the modern-day experience of womanhood is, in any physical sense, all that comparable. Access to education, political expression and meaningful employment opportunities were not luxuries afforded to the lady-folk of the period and their painfully prescribed existence perhaps explains why the works of Edith Nesbit, Henrik Ibsen and the Bronte sisters were, originally, so frostily received. Fancy having the audicity to suggest that women are able to act, think and speak independently and without any consent, invitation or supervision from a dashing male counterpart? That they can make a legitimate contribution to society without getting married and having babies. The very idea!

Suffrage and the 1918 and 1928 acts allowing women in Britain to vote did, in many ways, mark the beginning of a new-found social freedom for the female of the species. And yet, alas! Three waves of feminism later I still can't help but feel that for all the rhetoric, for all the bills passed about parliament, for all the Equal Opportunities forms on which I've put a cross in the 'F' box under 'Sex' (resisting the urge to scribble the words 'Oooh yes please' childishly in the margin) some of that suppresive Victoriana sentiment has survived. Modern-day corsets may not come in the explicit form of ornate lace bodices but that doesn't mean that we are not still living in the 'Doll's House.' Contemporary constraints are shrewder, sneakier; bordering, in fact, on the subconscious - but they are still there.

At present, for example, I feel it is almost impossible to open the Sunday paper without reading an article on why it is important to settle for any man rather than no man on the approach to turning thirty or how, as a woman, you never truly realise your life's purpose until you've given birth. These editorials always, startlingly, have female bylines printed beneath them, but I, of course, remain unconvinced. It's all one big George Eliot style conspiracy. Such articles are obviously written by the male descendents of Victorian Lords wanting to keep women in their place where they belong. I don't know if my hackles are raised merely because I'm their target audience: female, unmarried and pushing thirty but there seems to have been a glut of them lately and they are, at least to my eyes, most nauseating in nature.

Of course that alone is not enough to suggest that we are all just next-generation Noras and Torvalds...but wait! There's more. Even the words used to describe single men and women have positive and negative connotations respectively. The word bachelor, first used to describe a single man by Chaucer, is suggestive of somebody at the beginning of their life's career; yet to achieve great things. Spinster on the other hand, a word stemming from descriptions of spinning women in the sixteenth century, evokes a person who is lowly, destitute and possibly even redundant of any further use. Additionally, in order to 'have it all' these days women must have a successful career, a man and a baby in tow; accomplishment in employment alone is not sufficient to suggest success. Not for a woman anyway. Plus: ever noticed how books, films and TV shows portray unattached women as outcasts, depressives or man-eating temptresses who, rather literally, fill the void with unearthly amounts of sex? (Anne Yeo, Louise Sawyer, Susana Kaysen, Miss Bates, Bridget Jones, Elliot Reid and poor old Miss Tonks - the list goes ever on). Coincidence that they happen to be uninterested in/ unable to secure a marital union? I think not.

I realise, in my plight to convince you in eight hundred words that Victorian values have filtered down, if only in a diluted form, through the ages, that I may be coming across as somewhat anti-marriage. In fact this is not true at all. Marriage is fantastic...if it's entered into for the right reasons. The right reasons do not include: because you're turning thirty (or insert relevant milestone), because you want a baby or because you feel you will somehow be incomplete/inadequate unless you drag some unwitting fool down the aisle. Do not be deceived by the convenient social veneer we have constructed in the name of political correctness. Look close enough and you will see that most relationship editorials, advertisements, plot-lines and, in fact, just about every ounce of media output transmits the underlying message that a woman's rightful place is at a man's side where he can cast his sinewy shadow over her. If you're not in that position then, let's face it, there must be something fundamentally wrong with you and your life. You'd better buy that product/marry the wrong person/get pregnant, and fast! Or not.

In the wise old words of my Grandma: 'Better you be on the shelf than in the wrong cupboard.' I may have spent most of my years 'on the shelf' dusting myself off from various heart-aches and breaks but at least I won't find myself captive in an unbearably confined living situation for the rest of my days. As April Wheeler, Bertha Rochester and Laura Brown found out the hard way marriage is for life, not just for the photographs.

This is a Guest Post from Helen Cox. She is a photo-taking, book-loving, film-obsessed columnist and copywriter from North London. She is currently teaching English at a challenging school on the outskirts of the city whilst finishing her first novel.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Staying unhappy in Marriage but saying no to Divorce

Life definitely is not a bed of roses for all. We see so many couples who stay glued to their marriages because of reasons like kids, financial security, guilt, loneliness, society etc even if they are unhappy and miserable in their  relationships. Sometimes one or both of the couples in troubled marriages spend their entire lifetime trying to make the relationship work thinking some miracle will happen and things would change. I agree that you should Stop your Divorce and Save your Marriage but when things cannot be mended it is better to cut the losses and break off. Living an unhappy life for staying married is just not worth it.

While writing on this topic I can’t help remembering a college friend of mine whose husband used to beat her every single day for some reason or other and even though she knew that she had made a mistake marrying the guy against the parent’s wishes suffered everything for several years and hoping that things would change. But she hoped in vain and her husband who was a Muslim even married again. She used to get beaten up for reasons like talking to neighbors and for not asking her parents money to finance his needs. He found fault with her on everything she does and used to beat her black and blue and she suffered silently because by running away with this guy she had already given pain to her parents and did not want to cause them more pain by telling them that she was unhappy and miserable. After she gave birth to a girl child things became even worse for her and finally when she could not take it anymore she found her relief in suicide. By the time her parents came to know about how the guy was treating her through the letter she posted with the help of a neighbor it was too late to do anything. Though her parents approached the court of law based on the evidence they did not get the justice they deserved.

Sometimes couples in troubled marriages who have taken their time in getting into the marriage contract and promised to live together for lifelong are not very patient in fixing the problems and saving the marriage. The fact is that in a marriage you do not go to bed one night with a good one and wake up the next morning with a failed one. When problems between the couples are ignored for a long time and not sorted out it is only natural that the relationship would turn miserable. Rescuing your relationship and resuming your love life is not an easy task to do but not a difficult one either if you know what the problem is, work on fixing the problem and then get back to old times. It takes both the efforts of partners to make a relationship work. If either or one of the partners fails to do his or her part it may lead to an unhappy marriage. Most problems can be sorted out between the couple by communicating or by visiting a marriage councilor together and take advice on how to save the marriage. If your marriage is worth saving why not do everything in your power to save it but without wasting too much time.

Some years back a Billboard proclaiming "Life's short. Get a Divorce" by a Chicago Divorce Lawyers Firm caused enough of an uproar and criticism from all over. However, I see nothing wrong in that. Divorce may not be the answer to marriage problems. But when there is no hope of salvaging the relationship I guess one should count their losses and move forward in life. Whatever the reasons are I don’t think it is worth staying in a troubled and miserable marriage. After all, life is short to be wasted unhappy. What do you say?

 Related Article Links