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Model from:
Languages: en
Birth Date: 1990-05-08
Body Type: bodyTypeCurvy
Ethnicity: ethnicityIndian
Hair color: hairColorBlack
Eyes color: eyeColorBlack
Subculture: subcultureRomantic
Not necessarily. Me and my youngest sister are also (south) asian, but where I have long and thick body hair like my dad and elder sister, her hair is very sparse and light like my mothers. I'd say it really depends on genetics
I certainly don't think she's wrong to feel how she does, and if she feels fundamentally unsafe with/disgusted by OP because of a state of danger/oppression backed by religious dogma then it's absolutely in her best interest to leave this relationship.
I'm more confused of if OP is a disgusting person objectively for enjoying suggestive pictures with hijabs. It's contentious and from what I can see very harmful. Though as you mentioned it's not something all women are opposed to, so if a woman were in support of that would it be wrong for her partner to be as well? Is that woman fundamentally uneducated about the state of her own oppression, or is it a religious belief she is free to chose to or not to engage in? Did the content OP followed involve men at all, and if not is it still wrong for men to enjoy it on any and all terms?
When it is/has been a symbol of oppression against women but not all women see it as such then how does a man engage with that? Is there a correct stance for a man in that culture to take religiously? Morally? If his opinion is irrelevant then how does he support a partner who does or doesn't engage with that religious symbol if she sees it as such? Should his morals on it be beholden to hers or would he be morally correct to find a woman who didn't see it as oppressive as just uneducated/indoctrinated? (Because that seems a tad infantilizing, but again this is a topic that I'm not fully versed on)
It's just when it's said a man who enjoys something that is fundamentally nuanced but rooted in oppression shouldn't engage with any woman then where does that leave women who see things differently? And how does a man morally support that partner while being his own person?
You already know that he won’t change. You and your son deserve a better life. You deserve to on-line in peace where no one is yelling at you. I can tell you from experience that you’ll regret not leaving now. I was in a similar situation, deeply unhappy, and stayed twice as long. I really wish I had left at your age and saved myself years of loneliness and depression.
It won’t be easy, and you may even feel like it’s a mistake at first, but you will come out stronger. It takes time, especially when you’ve built your entire adult life with another person. But you can absolutely be independent and happy on your own. Also, the “acting better” because you’re leaving is a manipulation tactic that my ex also used. When you find yourself swayed by that, and you will, remind yourself of the truth. Those better periods are always temporary.