I apologise for the long post. But if anyone can offer suggestions or advice, it’d be greatly appreciated.
Planning and thinking too far ahead–This is the cause of a lot of our arguments, which is obviously very draining and not benefiting us at all while we are trying to organise my partner’s move to my country. I understand having a goal in mind, a general plan for the future. However, my partner takes it to new levels, and it’s honestly very stressful.
1: He will send me links to houses for sale that are worth $500,000+ that are absolutely ginormous, and tells me we can afford this in a year or two.
-The houses are always too big for two people, he’s not even in my country yet, neither of us have full-time well-paying jobs, and neither of us are eligible for a home loan until we’ve been in a full-time job for a certain period of time.
2: He’ll send me links to videos of cities in my country that we can move to, and then starts looking for houses to buy in each one.
-Some of the cities he chooses aren’t where I want to live. We haven’t even gotten through the first stage of having him move here and live in my town for several months to earn money. I’ve also always made it clear that I never want to live in a city, but I’d compromise for the outskirts or a suburb near-by.
3: He has a job lined up for when he arrives in my country, but instead of focusing on that, he is already planning for future jobs; what he’ll do, where he can apply, etc.
4: He has this “dream” to buy a campervan and travel around my country for 6 months, as a way for us to be adventurous while also searching for a place to settle down.
-He’s planning this before even having the means, the money, and the time for it to be possible. He seems to think during the first 3 months of working here, he can buy a campervan and set it all up for us. Campervans aren’t cheap, and with the job he’ll have it is 7 days a week, 8-12 hours a day. I don’t know where he thinks he’ll have the time or money to even buy and prepare a campervan!
5: He’s always researching cars that he wants, despite them either being too expensive or not accessible.
-He needs a car for when he moves here, and I have suggested to just buy one that will get him to where he needs to go for now. However, he is more focused on a more luxurious and powerful car that is not easy to find in my country. He’ll research for hours, and send me links to contenders, when I just want him to focus on getting here first and then we can go on the search for a car that is more affordable and suited for his situation and work.
6: He even goes as far as to plan that we will have a cottage/farm house, where our kids can grow up, followed by our grandkids.
-This is just beyond over-planning. I’m always speechless when he thinks this far ahead.
These are just some examples.
He has explained to me that he hates uncertainty, and planning actually makes him stress less. He said this move to my country is very stressful and frustrating, and so he is planning as much as he possibly can so that he is not faced with so many uncertain things. However, he’s taking it to extremes; when I think he needs to be planning in stages, focusing on the next couple of months and not the next several months/years.
When he tries to include me in these plans, I do become very angry. I am not someone who likes to plan so far ahead, as it stresses me out. I take each day at a time, though I do still make sure there is a goal that I work towards. I keep myself grounded and try to have a logical mind set, and I feel as though he is not on the same level. We can’t seem to ever work as a team when it comes to our future, because we plan in different ways and at different paces. He tries to include me in his plans, and loathes it when I disagree and prefer a different plan, or prefer to wait.
What can I/we do about this? I’m aware I should just let him do things the way he wants to do them, however when it’s greatly effecting me and how I choose to live/plan my life it becomes a big issue. Most of our plans include each other, it’s just he’s more focused on the distant future, whereas I am more focused on the here and now and the near future.
Thank you to anyone willing to help.
Planning and thinking too far ahead–This is the cause of a lot of our arguments, which is obviously very draining and not benefiting us at all while we are trying to organise my partner’s move to my country. I understand having a goal in mind, a general plan for the future. However, my partner takes it to new levels, and it’s honestly very stressful.
1: He will send me links to houses for sale that are worth $500,000+ that are absolutely ginormous, and tells me we can afford this in a year or two.
-The houses are always too big for two people, he’s not even in my country yet, neither of us have full-time well-paying jobs, and neither of us are eligible for a home loan until we’ve been in a full-time job for a certain period of time.
2: He’ll send me links to videos of cities in my country that we can move to, and then starts looking for houses to buy in each one.
-Some of the cities he chooses aren’t where I want to live. We haven’t even gotten through the first stage of having him move here and live in my town for several months to earn money. I’ve also always made it clear that I never want to live in a city, but I’d compromise for the outskirts or a suburb near-by.
3: He has a job lined up for when he arrives in my country, but instead of focusing on that, he is already planning for future jobs; what he’ll do, where he can apply, etc.
4: He has this “dream” to buy a campervan and travel around my country for 6 months, as a way for us to be adventurous while also searching for a place to settle down.
-He’s planning this before even having the means, the money, and the time for it to be possible. He seems to think during the first 3 months of working here, he can buy a campervan and set it all up for us. Campervans aren’t cheap, and with the job he’ll have it is 7 days a week, 8-12 hours a day. I don’t know where he thinks he’ll have the time or money to even buy and prepare a campervan!
5: He’s always researching cars that he wants, despite them either being too expensive or not accessible.
-He needs a car for when he moves here, and I have suggested to just buy one that will get him to where he needs to go for now. However, he is more focused on a more luxurious and powerful car that is not easy to find in my country. He’ll research for hours, and send me links to contenders, when I just want him to focus on getting here first and then we can go on the search for a car that is more affordable and suited for his situation and work.
6: He even goes as far as to plan that we will have a cottage/farm house, where our kids can grow up, followed by our grandkids.
-This is just beyond over-planning. I’m always speechless when he thinks this far ahead.
These are just some examples.
He has explained to me that he hates uncertainty, and planning actually makes him stress less. He said this move to my country is very stressful and frustrating, and so he is planning as much as he possibly can so that he is not faced with so many uncertain things. However, he’s taking it to extremes; when I think he needs to be planning in stages, focusing on the next couple of months and not the next several months/years.
When he tries to include me in these plans, I do become very angry. I am not someone who likes to plan so far ahead, as it stresses me out. I take each day at a time, though I do still make sure there is a goal that I work towards. I keep myself grounded and try to have a logical mind set, and I feel as though he is not on the same level. We can’t seem to ever work as a team when it comes to our future, because we plan in different ways and at different paces. He tries to include me in his plans, and loathes it when I disagree and prefer a different plan, or prefer to wait.
What can I/we do about this? I’m aware I should just let him do things the way he wants to do them, however when it’s greatly effecting me and how I choose to live/plan my life it becomes a big issue. Most of our plans include each other, it’s just he’s more focused on the distant future, whereas I am more focused on the here and now and the near future.
Thank you to anyone willing to help.
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