Dear Cary,
I have been spoiled with a very happy life. I am 26, married to a wonderful 34-year-old man whom I love more than anyone in the world. He is strong, supportive, smart, funny and affectionate. We are happy together. We are healthy. We live in a nice apartment in a beautiful neighborhood of an exciting city. We are overeducated. We are both from well-off families who funded our very expensive educations so we didn't have to go into debt. We want to have lots of babies and live happily ever after.
That hasn't been easy for us, so we are seeing lots of doctors who hopefully will be able to help us make that dream come true. Even our brush with infertility, while upsetting, has been something we are working through together.
I am writing because I am afraid, terrified, petrified really, that we are falling, diving, into a cycle of failure and debt. I am unemployed. Two years ago, we moved back to my husband's hometown. I still don't speak the language here very well, although I am taking classes and improving rapidly. While I am generally happy here -- I've managed to make friends, find activities to keep busy -- I have not found a job. I am a clinical social worker, so language is obviously important and jobs are very scarce here. My husband started his own business when we moved. I feel guilty even writing this, but it is a total failure. His income doesn't come close to covering our rent, and forget our lifestyle. Our savings are gone. The project my husband spent the last six months working day and night on just went to another firm. For the last year, my husband has been looking for a job at the same time as running his ailing business but nothing has come through.
The worst thing is that my husband doesn't seem to recognize the reality of any of this. Although he is very discouraged by his business venture, he is in total denial about the fact that we won't be able to pay our rent next month. He just bought me a diamond anniversary band. He wants to keep trying to make the business work. Maybe he isn't worried because in his heart, he believes his family will give us money. Maybe they will. In fact, they probably will, and so my fears of being thrown on the street are probably unfounded. I see being bailed out by his family as totally humiliating. I don't know if he would mind.
I'm not sure what to do, or what I really expect my husband to do. Part of me blames him for his failing business, even though I know how hard he is working. Part of me is asking what is wrong with him, that he just can't make it happen. The other part of me hates myself because I know that he wants his business to work even more than I do and, in reality, I am just as much of a failure in my work life as he is.
Should I encourage him to keep working at his business, to make his dream come true, and just suck it up and consider myself lucky if the in-laws are willing to pay the bills? Should I tell him to find a job, any job, and by the same standard, forget my own failed career goals and take whatever job is out there (McDonald's if need be)?
Should I just be happy with what we have and not worry if we drift through our lives never reaching some mythical point of career fulfillment?
Spoiled Girl Looking for Direction
Dear Spoiled,
I suggest that you turn to your family for help. Don't ask for money. Ask for expertise. You need an outside opinion. If your family is successful and well-off, there must be people in it who are knowledgeable about business, no? Or are you royalty? Don't tell me your family is the kind that just spends money and doesn't earn it.
You need a sober assessment of your husband's business plan, so you can form a clear picture of his chances for success. Only then can you decide if the struggle makes sense. Even if your family is royalty, they must have somebody on retainer to balance the books. You need a person like that.
If you went directly to your husband and said you wanted to have an expert look over his business plan, he might feel that you don't have much faith in his business ability and that you are trying to meddle. Which would be true. So you can try to arrange an assessment on the up-and-up. But you might have to arrange for someone to approach your husband as a potential investor. He could assess the cash flow potential, the competition (who was it who ate his lunch on that last big deal?), and so forth. If he becomes satisfied that your husband has a good business model, he might go ahead and invest. If not, you might want to start looking for a job.
Look, I too have been on the brink of financial disaster, and I know how humiliating it is, and how fear of the future can weigh on you, how you just want to lash out at anyone, find a victim, find a cause, find something you can pinpoint as the source of your anxiety. So I know what that's like. I also know it doesn't last. Usually -- especially if, as you say, you have resources and an education -- you find a way out of it. It might mean taking a stupid job for a while. There's nothing wrong with that. In fact, the humble regularity of a stupid job can be strangely liberating.
The subterfuge of having your husband's business analyzed by an outsider may bother you. For all I know, it may be ethically wrong. But I don't think so. I think you are at a disadvantage because you have no facts; you are vulnerable; there is a lot at stake here, and you need to take steps to protect yourself. If you're able to figure out what the problem is with the business, you will be protecting your husband as well. He truly may not know what he's doing. If he's not a good businessman, the sooner he learns that, the sooner he can get out of business.
The truth is, you'll probably be fine. One way or another, you'll get through this. You'll find a job in your field, your families may help you over the hump, things will work out. But business is not about dreams. It's about columns of numbers. The sooner your husband realizes that, the better.
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