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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Feeling unheard and unsure – cultural differences or emotional neglect

36 replies

CloudedMirror6 · 29/07/2025 18:16

Hi everyone, I’m really struggling and would appreciate some honest perspectives.
My husband and I started living together for the first time in October 2024, when he moved to England from Albania. He works as a waiter and is adjusting to life here. It’s been a big change for both of us, and I’ve tried to be patient and supportive, but I’m feeling more and more unheard and uncertain in our relationship. I often explain things away as cultural differences or language, but it's starting to not sit right. We are in our early 40s. I felt like I was strong but this has really worn me down.

A small example recently left me really hurt. I cooked spaghetti Bolognese for him after his shift, but he didn’t want it as he’d had something similar at work. Fair enough – he said he’d eat it the next day. But the next morning, he told me he was hungry the night before. I reminded him the food was in the fridge, and he replied that he thought I’d cook something else. I felt criticised and unappreciated – like my effort meant nothing.
That’s just one example, but there’s a wider pattern that’s starting to really affect me:

  • He sometimes laughs when I’m voicing genuine concerns.
  • When I shared my anxiety about having a baby, he gave me the silent treatment, then later acted like nothing happened because he was angry.
  • He removed our wedding photos from his Facebook because he said he didn’t like how he looked.
  • When I ask for affection, he responds with things like “what happens when I don’t give it?”
  • There’s ongoing pressure to have a baby, even though I’ve explained financial stress and mental health reasons. He ignores those and focuses on our ages and how it “looks” to others.
  • I’m often told I’m too sensitive, that his intentions aren’t what I think, or that “this is just his culture.” I am a sensitive person and can be emotional, but this is who I am.
  • If I say he’s upset me, I’m told he “didn’t shout or hit me.”
  • He often speaks in a derogatory way about women, doesn’t really compliment me, and believes that men showing lots of love is a weakness.
  • When I’m on my period and not in the mood for sex, he’s had a negative reaction – only once, but it left me feeling awful. I’ve tried to compromise (like suggesting sex during the day instead of at night), but he won’t meet me halfway.
  • When something he says upsets me, and I say so, I’m told I’m changing the conversation
  • If there’s no food he likes or things aren’t how he expects, he’ll get moody, complain, or just walk out of the room. I feel like I’m walking on eggshells constantly.
  • I told him I felt small and not listened to, but when I went quiet, he said, “The environment is weird”, and went to call his mum.
  • He tells me to talk to him about how I feel, but I genuinely don’t know what the point is anymore.

And last Thursday really angered and upset me:
We were walking, and he accidentally bumped into me. I gave him a look (not intentionally angry, just surprised), and he shouted at me in the street, saying I gave him a dirty look. Later that evening, we were on a bus, and he couldn’t sit in a space – and he swore at me.

I know relationships aren’t perfect, and I do try to see things from his side, including the cultural differences. But I feel like I’m the only one adjusting. I give in to avoid arguments, and I’m now questioning: how much compromise is too much?

I feel quite lost and isolated in this. Has anyone else been through something similar? Am I missing something here?
Thanks so much if you’ve read all this. I really appreciate any advice or perspective.

OP posts:
Lurkingandlearning · 29/07/2025 19:16

This isn’t cultural, this is how horrible men behave the world over. I assume he treated you well early on, maybe so he could come to the UK, maybe not. But that would explain why he now treats you so badly. It seems he has got almost all he wanted from you except a child. Please do not give him that too or you will be stuck with this misogynistic abuser for years and he will not be a good father., certainly not a good example

stayathomer · 29/07/2025 19:17

To be honest it’s different living away from what you know, but you sound so unsure that there’s no way you can have anything resembling a normal life, you are both very very different. Nobody can live like that x Do you have friends and family to talk to?

gamerchick · 29/07/2025 19:18

Do not get pregnant to this specimen or your life will get a whole lot worse and your child will witness it.

HundredMilesAnHour · 29/07/2025 19:23

It sounds very much like he’s used you to get to the UK legally. I’m sorry. If this is/was a genuine love match, he certainly isn’t behaving like it now. I suspect he thinks he’s in the UK and has his visa so now he can treat you however he likes.

Do you have friends or family nearby who can support you? It very much sounds like he’s abusive and that this may continue to escalate unless you treat him like the king he thinks he is. You need to get out. As soon as you can. And please don’t have a child with this man.

OfficerChurlish · 29/07/2025 19:31

Regardless of whether cultural differences or language barrier play some role, his behaviour is making you miserable and he won't or can't engage with you when you try to discuss it with him in order to understand each other better and come to some compromises so you can both be secure and happy.

His communication is at best very poor - just for example, he didn't like the dinner you cooked and expected you to make him something else (not sure why he didn't get HIMSELF something else) but didn't say a word until the next day when he blamed you for not having read his mind. He's making you responsible for his well-being (you're not) and then blaming you when you fail his random made-up tests. I don't think a language or cultural barrier explains this. The "silent treatment" is a big red flag too; he's not just punishing you for not doing as he wants but also making you afraid to trust your own judgement and assert your own boundaries in case he again punishes you. It's miserable, and it will get worse.

Overall, he doesn't seem to care that you're unhappy. In fact, I'd say he at least sometimes seems to enjoy causing you pain. That's not what any marriage should be like. If he won't or can't communicate and treat you as an equally important person as himself when it comes to the relationship and the household, there's no future.

Anywherebuthere · 29/07/2025 19:32

It's not cultural. There are abusive men like this from all sorts of backgrounds. Sadly theres too many like this.

You list so many negatives. Are there any positives? (I can't imagine any positives could balance out that many negatives)

This is how you feel now. Do you want live feeling this way potential for many years to come if you do end up having a child/children with him.

Are you OK with possibly not meeting anyone compatible soon, therefore perhaps not having a child at all if you do leave him? Having a baby with this man will make it harder to cut ties and he won't be much of a role model father figure.

Brightasarainbow · 29/07/2025 20:52

OP, I'm in a mixed cultural marriage, with a husband from a much more conservative culture. It only works if you're both willing to change and adapt- how is he working to align with your needs?

My husband comes from a very houseproud culture that is mostly centred around women doing the housework. I've adapted to him by working a lot harder on my side of the housework, even though cleaning intensely bores me. He's adapted by taking a higher proportion of the cleaning than he would do in his culture, and also dropping the idea that women should have a bigger emotional tie to housekeeping.

I wanted to give a concrete example as a benchmark of starting miles apart and then finding a meeting point. So you can see if there's any places that you're coming together, or if it's all 'his way' disguised as a cultural difference.

Also FYI, my DH is a very fussy eater and sometimes doesn't eat what I cook. So he then makes himself something else later. I wouldn't stand for an expectation to cook again just for him.

blacksax · 29/07/2025 20:56

You get arseholes in all cultures.

Divorce him. What on earth persuaded you to marry him in the first place?

AmusedLion · 29/07/2025 21:01

Im sorry op xx
A woman from his culture would probably be miserable under your circumstances but suffer in silence. YOU DON'T HAVE TO DO IT. This marriage will only work if you sacrifice your sense of dignity and self. He knew exactly what he was doing by hiding his nasty traits in the beginning. Now his mask is off and the only way it will come on again is if you decide to leave. Good luck to you and what you decide. X

Ginnygi · 29/07/2025 21:02

My two pens is that he hasn't changed.
I think he's always been this way and you couldn't notice due to long distance.

I don't know what to advise really.. couple counseling?

suburberphobe · 29/07/2025 21:16

@Ginnygi

Couple counselling?

That's just a waste of money. Most counsellers anyway have no idea of intercultural relationships, if they are not in one themselves.
(Been there, done that, money down the drain.).

I'd say one thing to you OP. RUN! AND. Have 100% protection against pregnancy.

He doesn't love you. Please do not bring a child into the mix. this mess

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