My wife and I moved abroad to Thailand for three years back in 2016. At that time I did not want to move abroad because my parents were elderly and my father had Parkinson’s. We moved abroad anyway and I left my job for her job as a trailing spouse. We spent three wonderful years there. Now we are back in United States. She now wants to move abroad again but my father has progressed quite a bit. I have spoken with her and told her that I want to be closer to my parents because I’m worried about their health. She has given me ultimatums a few times saying that we are different people. We have two small children. I want to be there for my father but I don’t want my marriage to get ruined and not be able to see my children. Should I leave my parents, or should I separate to care for my father? I don’t want to ruin my marriage over this but she will not compromise.
You say you want to stay with your wife so personally, I would move. If the move can be postponed you could negotiate and move in 1,2 or more years. In that time you could help care for your parents. However, your parents will need increasing care and at some point they will need professional help. Especially as you have young kids who will need you involved in their lives.
I have lived in different countries and it was the best experience I have ever had. Even while my mother needed care, I traveled and lived abroad as it was a life goal of mine. When my mother started to need even more care, my parents encouraged me to continue to follow my dreams as they could get support elsewhere but I might not have another chance to live the life of my dreams.
I would recommend going with your wife. I know this is difficult. You love her and your children. You love your parents. But the key thing is that your parents are in the twilight of their lives and you are in the midst of yours. You can’t stop your time nor they theirs. Your children are only young once. Look to your long term future.
Care can be arranged for your parents. Your obligation is to your wife and children.
Even my Dad told me the same thing. Even up to last week my Dad still encourages me to get a 2nd degree and to not delay my career on his account.
It was one of the most painful conversations we have had.
But it is good advice. It gave me some sort of closure. Realistically as you are making yourself, there may be a time when you may have to travel. None of us want to be overseas when our parents die....but you can't stall your life and not go for your dreams until your parents have died...either.
Please do not let disease in your parents, spoil your marriage.
Your parents know that you love them. And as long as you make sure that you do everything you can for them, before you travel... that's the most you can do.
This is coming from someone who is the last in my family. I know now that my Mom probably will not see me get married, or see grandkids from me. By the time that happens...either she won't understand...or she will be gone.
Good luck.
Lose your children’s passports right away.
Hire a lawyer to advise you on how to keep your children.
I was a sailor for twenty years. I’ve seen that situation more times than I can remember. If your kids go out of country you’ll be lucky to ever see them again. At best your ex-wife will rent you access to your children.
OP has not elaborated further on his situation. We do not know whether OP's intentions are to be with his dad, putting the care on the mom, or worse yet trying to get the kids when they're a bit older to "help" with dad's diapers. We don't know if dad was nasty to the DIL to begin with, but we know that does exacerbate with many elders, dementia or not.
It could be just as true that this husband is actually trying to move his dad in. Which would trigger a very fast split-up with me personally if SO ever tried to do this. If he moved into their house, it would be sayonara, and I've been very clear about that boundary. If there was such an agreement that he not do this, and now he's trying to, then I wouldn't really blame her for wanting to move the fam to Thailand. The Thailand part with the kids is unrealistic, but OP needs to realize that if he broached the marriage agreement by putting Father First, that a split up could happen without her being the bad guy.
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Which is why I suggested to OP that she should be allowed to move for her job anywhere in the lower 48. That would mean moving him. And if the OP did choose to spend his non-custody days at his father's bedside with Southwest tickets, super his decision.
But we don't know. He hasn't come back to tell us.
If she's the type that would not allow you to see your children if you separated, that is a very bad sign in many ways. If they are both your children, perhaps a custody arrangement can be made. It happens all the time. I can also say from experience as the child, a parent staying in a bad marriage only damages children and teaches them the wrong messages.
Sorry to be harsh, but please think about YOUR sanity, your health (which will be affected eventually if you stay with someone who doesn't respect your wishes), your children's mental, physical and future health and experiences.
If she is not willing to delay moving until you feel comfortable, then that should tell you right there. Don't you deserve someone who respects your needs and wishes?
I'm writing this as someone who ignored the advice I just gave you and only learned all this in retrospect after all the damage is done. Wishing you all the best.
There are a wealth of organizations and support groups for you to get help and information.
I will say it was also a painful time as I had been married for 19yrs. I never regretted the choice I made. And my mother thanked me for being there with her. She was so happy and greatful and so was I. My mother was there for her children I wasn't going to abandon her.
All the forum participants who tell you to blindly follow your wife, simply because she is your wife, may not truly be considering your best interests.
In order for any relationship to work there has to be compromise. It sounds like you have given, but are getting none in return. If you divorce, she would not be able to take the kids out of the country unless she were awarded full custody.
Once your parents are gone, there is no getting them back. No amount of money or exquisite travel opportunities can replace them.
Nice women are a dime a dozen.
How will she treat you when you are the sick one? You should think about how you want to live the rest of your life.
right.
——
i feel for us:
many of us are in tricky situations/dilemmas…
forced to choose between spouse or parents…
between our own life or parents…
etc.
hard.
——
i’m a firm believer that there are solutions. keep looking.
decide who to keep in your life.
do please keep yourself in your life, too.
hug!!!
If she has a job now, making near to same as what she made abroad, the move is purely for the travel and not for the money. Can you live comfortably on what she makes now? Are you able to earn more here or abroad...or as a trailing spouse, does that mean your employment is not that important financially.
Where are her parents? If they got ill, would she participate more in their lives? If not, that's how her brain works. The parents aren't a priority. Some people are like that.
If it were me, I wouldn't be able to go while dad is even more on the decline. I would want to spend as much quality time as I could. If you left now, you may make a few visits back to see them, but that phone call that may come while you're abroad may mean you MIGHT be able to say goodbye, but you will have lost time with dad. All comes back to - can you live with that? I can't see that it would hurt to spend a few more years in the states and then return to the world travel
It may be helpful to recreate in your mind the 'ideal death bed', and think about where this ideal came from, how realistic it is, and how much it matters to the person dying - or to God.
Proximity seems to be irrelevant to how much someone supports a parent. I know people who live a few miles away and do little to nothing, and others who live on the other side of the country who do a good job of supporting their family member.
Yet, my personal experience, closeness is EVERYTHING if you are a primary caregiver. By that I don't mean living in the same country, state, or city, but truly present on a daily basis with increasing time and energy commitments as your parents age. Are you really looking to take that kind of commitment on yourself?
There are dozens of ways to support aging parents. But, if you aren't willing to step up to the day-in, day-out, hands-on, fully responsible components of caregiving, you are using your father's illness as an excuse to separate from your wife.
It's time to think outside the box and solve the problems coming your father's way. That may or may not mean you living in the US.
As parents, it is our responsibility to provide our children with roots and wings (roots = stability and care of their bodies, minds and spirits and wings=the ability to leave the nest and fly on their own). In our culture (the USA), parents accept and expect their children to leave the parental home, especially once their son or daughter marries and has children. I do not think it is fair of you to make yourself feel guilty over putting the needs of your marriage and children first.
You should absolutely use the time RIGHT NOW to have a deep conversation with your dad over anything in your relationship with him through the years that has disturbed or worried you. Do not put it off. This will help you have a clearer mind about any potential relocation with your family.
Keep in mind that you will be able to have contact and communicate with your father and those involved with his day-too-day care via visual and audio technology (not the best option but still a viable option). You and your spouse can also work out a budget where you could plan to visit your dad from abroad every three months or so.
You asked for opinions, so here is mine: I believe your primary responsibility now is to your young children and your spouse. I can foresee many serious traumatic situations for your two children if you should leave them to be with your father.
I would advise you to 1a) talk with your father as described above. 1b) immediately talk with your father's physicians about the prognosis for your father. Ask specific questions: How long is your dad expected to live? What will your father experience physically and cognitively during the last month of his life? Share this information with your spouse. If his life expectancy is less than three months, then it is reasonable for her to relocate AFTER your father passes on. If the prognosis is years away, then that is a totally different matter.
2) You and your wife need to consider the wisdom of traveling and relocating overseas during this COVID pandemic. Expectations are that the rest of the winter of 2021 into Spring 2022 are going to be brutal in terms of lives lost. Are these truly the circumstances to which you and your wife want to subject your children right now? On a very practical side, you and your family might not even be allowed to travel and relocate to another country. The regulations are changing constantly and at a moment's notice. Do you want to be "stuck" somewhere while you are halfway to you eventual location?
3) I also think you and your spouse need to be very frank with one another about the state of your marriage. What does it say if you both are willing to separate from one another both geographically and legally, regardless of your father's condition? Perhaps before any firm decisions are made, it would be helpful for the two of you to sit with a good counselor to discuss how you both feel about your union and being parents BEFORE your even discuss the various options.
I sincerely hope you are all able to work things out for the best of all who'll be impacted by this...but especially your children. I am concerned for them the most.
Both men and women often have an unrealistic understanding about how much work, time and mental energy it takes to keep a household going in the way both would prefer. Women don’t value their own contribution enough, because it seems ‘normal’. Men ‘help’, but often not to the same ‘standard’, so wife does the job again. Husband complains that wife’s standards are unnecessarily high, and that none of it matters, but he still expects things to be pretty good. Wife says she does the lion’s share, and isn’t appreciated. Doing the lion’s share on top of a high stress job, seems like a very good reason to want to live where domestic help is easily found, afforded and acknowledged as perfectly normal.
OP, all we know about your wife and why she won’t compromise is your simple statement. There has to be a reason that you haven’t mentioned. Could the problem be solved in the USA?
I know a woman with a restless spirit. Chances are Thailand is the next stop but it won’t end there.
"I don’t want to ruin my marriage over this but she will not compromise".
Marriage is full of compromises..
She using the kids as a bargaining chip. You don't do what I want, I'll take the kids. He should know his rights regardless of where they live and what they do.
She can't use the kids as a blackmail scheme whenever she wants.
He needs proper counciling of his rights as a parent even if he stays or moves.
However, if your wife files for divorce AFTER you get to Thailand, you'll be screwed. You likely won't be able to move the kids back to the US. And what about Thai Family Court? How does that work? Who gets the kids? Would you be unemployed, and relegated to visits every other weekend, receiving no child support, or worse, having to pay her child support?
I recommend having a real come-to-Jesus talk with yourself about that. And speak privately with a family law attorney with experience in international child custody matters. If you believe your wife will divorce you in Thailand, just beat her to it, and pull the plug and file first in the US. There's no way a US Family Court will let her move the kids abroad without your consent.
Go for some therapy. I’m glad she’s not my neighbor. Do I sense narcissism? How dare she use children as a pawn because she is unhappy.
Best of luck with your decision.
That your wife isn't willing to care about your parents' care is a problem for me. Especially, if she's not willing to compromise. Yikes! I'm so sorry for you and your children.
Maybe you can stay here in the states, with your young children so that they can know their grandparents before they pass. I can only imagine hearing your children say, "I never got to know my grandparents, because Mommy wanted to go abroad..."
Is that going to be okay with you? If you were your father/parents, what would you want? Do onto others as you would want done to you, PERIOD!
Is your wife willing to treat her parents the same way?
Regardless of wife & children, you will have to sleep with yourself.
See a therapist to help you make a decision that you will do your best not to regret.
I'm praying for you and others like you in the same position.
Do you have siblings or other relatives to help with your dad?
Can you afford to periodically go back and forth to see your parents? Remember we are dealing with Covid and ever changing travel restrictions. You would not want to get stuck in Thailand If you are needed in the states.