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K truth be told...

[c=359E00]i don't think m into arab dudes. I mean they take the alpha male position to the next level and its not my cup of tea u know..idk😑
Do i really have a choice in the matter? 😦[/c]
Miram · 31-35, F Best Comment
Lot tend to be extremely sensitive. They can't handle a woman that is more intelligent nor successful than them. And they have an unreasonable desire for control.

It is culturally enabled negativity and immaturity.
Miram · 31-35, F
@nightjourney I have to deal with lot of it. It is not easy being a woman in a majority arab community because you find yourself having to give up your happiness to make others happy. And it is so normalized.

There is more love in someone who encourages and celebrates your growth rather than attempt to limit you so they can keep up. The second limit their own potential for love by limiting you.

Never ever make the same mistake twice.
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Miram · 31-35, F
@nightjourney

We don't need to be in relationships. The pressure to meet these ridiculous aged expectations is nothing but morally lazy nonsense.

Take your time healing before you let another settle in your heart. They better know to love truly or hit the door.

This time you wont have to be the one waiting because you will be wiser and whole.

There are some Arabs and Muslims who are well-educated, moderate and actually in favour of feminism.

Looking for a life mate is hard enough without automatically closing off a whole section of men just because of an assumption.

You have plenty of choice. The hard part is figuring out how to meet and get to know the kind of man you're looking for.
Where would he hang out?
What kinds of interests and values does he have?
How can you put yourself in a position where it's easy to get to know him?

I know one woman who advertised herself as a deckhand on the noticeboard of a yacht club. She was hired as crew by several captains until eventually she met her husband, an architect and developer.
@nightjourney
That sounds like a very difficult situation.

I think it would be a very good idea to confide in your mother about what is happening.

Do you have children with your husband? If so, how old are they?
If so, they would stay with their father, and if he was vindictive he might deny you the opportunity to see them. Is this a price you could bear?

Are there any other ways you could rearrange your life to create more happiness, such as working for a charity, taking up a hobby, or developing a circle of women friends?

If you want a divorce, next time he says he wants it, you could gently ask him to grant it to you.
It would give him the chance to marry someone he could really love.
(Maybe tell him you're sorry you've been unable to make him happy. Make it so he sees the advantages to himself.)

Or you could go three times, to a tribunal-of-three-imams, to ask them to grant you a divorce.
This is a long and very hard path that would take a great deal of patience.
(The easiest way - that is legally acceptable in Islam - is to say that you feel absolutely no sexual desire for your husband. This leaves both you and him blameless.)
The first two times the tribunal will tell you to return home and pray to Allah to bless your marriage with love. They'll tell you to do you best to be a good wife. But in the end if there is no sexual desire or real evidence that your husband is abusing you and that he is making no effort to change his ways, they will usually grant you the divorce on the third request.

Do you have an education and/or work? Could you get work with the skills you have?
Does the country or community you live in allow a mature woman to live on her own?
Could you start a small business?

If you're living in a Western country, would you be willing to reach out and make friends with new people?

If you returned to your parents' home, would they welcome and nurture you?

It sounds as though you're living in the midst of a traditional Muslim community or country. That would make your situation a lot more difficult - but still not impossible.

Although it's very hard not to be affected by the cultural "shame" of divorce, try to remember that it's a deliberate form of manipulation to try to reduce the number of divorces. But Mohammed Himself sanctioned divorce. He also said that a divorced man and a divorced woman may choose and marry each other. It means that in a second marriage you would have more choice, no longer compelled by honour to obey your father's choice of a husband for you.
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@nightjourney Many Muslim women don't realise that there are a few Sharia laws to protect their interests.
Once a woman has already been married and is now divorced or widowed, she has the right to make her own choice about who and whether she marries again. She also has the right to earn her own living.
Muhammad said a woman who has been divorced may remarry, but only to a man who has been divorced. Since there are many couples who divorce, that creates a lot of choice. There will undoubtedly be online sites for Muslim divorcees who are looking for another spouse. There will be a wide range from those who are fundamentalist through conservative, moderate, liberal, or lapsed, al the way to those who have rejected their faith. You would be able to choose a man who attitudes and beliefs agree with yours.

Try not to worry too much about the haram aspect of divorce.
What is clean is a honesty, integrity and kindness. If you live by these, Allah is sure to be merciful.
Viper · M
I think so, I mean, you could be single, or into Arabs that aren't dudes, or dudes that aren't Arabs, or even some whom aren't Arab, nor dudes lol
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GanglandCriminal97 · 26-30, M
Whats wrong with that?

You wanna be with a guy who wears panties or something?
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Northwest · M
You may want to start this conversation in the dating section, not the Police & Law section. That aside, you're Canadian, so you have options, if you choose (and can) break from your "traditions". If you break away (financially, emotionally, religiously, etc), then your current status-quo is your choice.
empanadas · 31-35, M
You can always look for sw men.
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empanadas · 31-35, M
@nightjourney this is south park
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