Re: supportive one minute, negative the next
Sometimes reactions can be about something completely different than they appear to be on the surface. While maybe the concern really is the expense, it might also be something else - insecurity, fear, power, jealousy, loneliness, any number of things. I don't know anything about you, your husband or your relationship, so please know I am just tossing out ideas of things to look at. Only you can tell if it seems to fit. And it might be that he is just really concerned about money. But in my long marriage career, (25 years) I have just noticed that often, one of us will be complaining about something that
seems justifiable, but deep down, it is often something else that is the real worry. But it is less ok to say, "I am afraid you will get a new job and not want me anymore, or make more money than me, or find someone new or have the easy ability to leave me" or whatever. Yet it is ok to say, "I am concerned about finances." You know?
So, I am not saying that is what it is, but there is SO MUCH change that comes with this! It is so consuming, and when you have to have the top grades, you may isolate yourself with your books (I do) or the house might be a mess (mine is) or your kids might not get the same care (mine don't) or your husband might have to pick up the slack (mine sort of does) and you might not be as emotionally or physical available (I'm not) and your interests might be wildly developing (mine are) and your circle of friends might be changing (mine is) and all of that is SCARY - to everyone. Exciting yes, but wobbly and uncertain, especially if you are the one that is trying to stay status quo. Your husband has no way of knowing how this will change your lives. He has no way of knowing how or if your expansive new endeavor is going to change you or cause you to leave the ways of your old life, or him behind. And, there is the money issue.
I think my hubby is a little concerned that I might have spent all this time (and money) and still have more time and money for the actual NS and then say, "Uh, I don't like nursing. This isn't for me. I really want to be a ...."
Also, just speaking personally, I think education represents something huge. Lots of somethings. Things that are power based. Education is a great equalizer. Its a privilege and a measure of worthiness, too. That is worth looking at. I know too, that sometimes my husband says, "I wish I could go back to school" and he is sort of jealous. It is such an investment and requires so much sacrifice, especially once you are married and have a family!
It takes a LOT to be supportive of all of that, I think. It can be easy to forget that it will benefit the entire family, not just the recipient of the education. It is supporting big change and uncertainty, not just books and tuition and childcare costs. Not just the lost of wages.
All that said, only you know your life. I hope that the two of you can work through this in a way that you can both grow and your marriage be strengthened. I will tell you again as an old married lady - it is the trials that strengthen you, not the easy time. Finding the ways to allow each other to follow your individual dreams while keeping your mutual dreams in tact takes work, but it can be done. Communicate and compromise and never forget that you are in all of this together. You can work it out.
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