My SO and I are the love of each other's life. After two years of obsessing about living together, we have already spent quite a lot of time together in my house (last time was 8 - 9 weeks consecutively). This really felt like living together, as you can probably imagine... But we are nowhere near financially independent, we both lean on our parents income for food etc, and are desperate to create financial stability in the future. We have laid out all possibilities and they seem meagre and weak. At this point, I'm already looking for a social worker to talk to, because it's giving me serious panic. As a low-educated HSP who lives in a time of job crisis and has a partner in a different country that I don't fluently speak the language of, I feel like pulling my hair out!!
If we were to live in Italy (SO's country):
- His work: My SO really wants to continue as a freelance web designer, but in my opinion it's not stable enough to rely on that source of income *alone* (and he sees that too)... It's a struggle to find clients. There can be month(s) between one client and the next. My SO is also a bit passive in nature, so he's not your typical hustled businessman. He prefers to let things come to him, rather than go after them. He has found a few clients this way, but it's more a one-time boost for his saving account, and not a monthly recurring source to live off. I'm just not seeing the viability of a freelance occupation (except for the very lucky ones out there)... It can't exist that you don't know - and thus worry like crazy - whether you earn enough to eat and pay your rent the next month, right?!
To make it extra complicated: Let's say my SO decided to take another job, for a steady income (he has a degree). Well, the number of jobs available in proportion to the number of job hunters is incredibly depressing in Italy. The chance of finding work is low enough not to trust it. My SO can't do the most 'despised' jobs, like cleaning or working at a call center. He is a sensitive guy and has a history of panic attacks. Such jobs would make him too anxious.
- My work: I could only work from home (handicraft), since my Italian is really very basic, and I don't have any degree other than high school. In other words: I could faintly support my SO financially, but god knows how much! If I don't sell anything, it's nothing. So it's only in the best scenario that I can be of significant help... Doesn't sound very solid, right?
- Family: Seeing my parents wouldn't really be a problem. It might sound harsh, but I would be OK with seeing them twice a year. We live very different lives already, despite sharing the house with my mom. I don't even see my dad every day. I mean, there is Skype. They would understand and cover the price of the flights, as they would probably come to us more often than we to them.
If we were to live in the Netherlands (my country):
- His work: The same, freelancing. Hopefully he could still find Italian clients from here (or Dutch, who don't mind negotiating in English). If he wanted to find a more steady job, it would be tough, because he doesn't speak Dutch and the job market isn't great here either. I don't know if it would really be any worse for him than in Italy, though.
- My work: Sadly, I only graduated from high school, because there used to be deep issues that prevented me from studying. Anyway, because I am a native, I have no language issues and can still work at any place where you don't need much education but have to talk to people (café, shop...). I'm not saying this is easy to find, but possible if I keep trying hard for long enough. It would at least provide some financial steadiness.
- Family: Now here it comes... My SO just can't go longer than two months without seeing his parents. It makes him feel out of place, and I totally understand that! However, his parents can't visit us very easily (i.e. dog), so he would need to go there. This is going to be a massive financial burden with flight tickets (his parents aren't going to pay for that). In addition, it's probably going to interfere with his work, and depending on my kind of work, I might not even be able to join him.
It feels like we need a place to live where we could survive even if we earned zero in one month. So... No rent, no bills, no absolute need for the supermarket. Some people can do this, but they had $ / € 20.000> to invest in a property. It works if you have significant savings. My SO has some savings, but not that much.
If we were to live in Italy (SO's country):
- His work: My SO really wants to continue as a freelance web designer, but in my opinion it's not stable enough to rely on that source of income *alone* (and he sees that too)... It's a struggle to find clients. There can be month(s) between one client and the next. My SO is also a bit passive in nature, so he's not your typical hustled businessman. He prefers to let things come to him, rather than go after them. He has found a few clients this way, but it's more a one-time boost for his saving account, and not a monthly recurring source to live off. I'm just not seeing the viability of a freelance occupation (except for the very lucky ones out there)... It can't exist that you don't know - and thus worry like crazy - whether you earn enough to eat and pay your rent the next month, right?!
To make it extra complicated: Let's say my SO decided to take another job, for a steady income (he has a degree). Well, the number of jobs available in proportion to the number of job hunters is incredibly depressing in Italy. The chance of finding work is low enough not to trust it. My SO can't do the most 'despised' jobs, like cleaning or working at a call center. He is a sensitive guy and has a history of panic attacks. Such jobs would make him too anxious.
- My work: I could only work from home (handicraft), since my Italian is really very basic, and I don't have any degree other than high school. In other words: I could faintly support my SO financially, but god knows how much! If I don't sell anything, it's nothing. So it's only in the best scenario that I can be of significant help... Doesn't sound very solid, right?
- Family: Seeing my parents wouldn't really be a problem. It might sound harsh, but I would be OK with seeing them twice a year. We live very different lives already, despite sharing the house with my mom. I don't even see my dad every day. I mean, there is Skype. They would understand and cover the price of the flights, as they would probably come to us more often than we to them.
If we were to live in the Netherlands (my country):
- His work: The same, freelancing. Hopefully he could still find Italian clients from here (or Dutch, who don't mind negotiating in English). If he wanted to find a more steady job, it would be tough, because he doesn't speak Dutch and the job market isn't great here either. I don't know if it would really be any worse for him than in Italy, though.
- My work: Sadly, I only graduated from high school, because there used to be deep issues that prevented me from studying. Anyway, because I am a native, I have no language issues and can still work at any place where you don't need much education but have to talk to people (café, shop...). I'm not saying this is easy to find, but possible if I keep trying hard for long enough. It would at least provide some financial steadiness.
- Family: Now here it comes... My SO just can't go longer than two months without seeing his parents. It makes him feel out of place, and I totally understand that! However, his parents can't visit us very easily (i.e. dog), so he would need to go there. This is going to be a massive financial burden with flight tickets (his parents aren't going to pay for that). In addition, it's probably going to interfere with his work, and depending on my kind of work, I might not even be able to join him.
It feels like we need a place to live where we could survive even if we earned zero in one month. So... No rent, no bills, no absolute need for the supermarket. Some people can do this, but they had $ / € 20.000> to invest in a property. It works if you have significant savings. My SO has some savings, but not that much.
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