“Lobola paid, but doubts remain: Did my mother see the red flags I ignored?” – The Blind Spot – Firstgora.buzz

“Lobola paid, but doubts remain: Did my mother see the red flags I ignored?” – The Blind Spot

Zuko Komisa

Image | Adobe Stock

Anonymous is torn between his love for his fiancée and his fear for their financial future.

Having paid lobola and moved in together, he is now haunted by his family’s warnings that he is settling for someone below his professional and financial level.

His dilemma is whether her lack of financial structure is a genuine red flag or if he is being unfairly judgmental by measuring love through the lens of status.

Ultimately, he fears he will spend his life carrying the relationship’s weight alone, yet feels guilty for questioning her worth based on her bank balance and business admin.

“Uncle T, my fiance and I have been together for about a year and five months. Early in our relationship, before I even had the chance to properly introduce him, my sister told my mother that he was not good for me. She said he was changing me, that he wasn’t “my type,” and that socially and financially we were not on the same level. From the beginning, my mother has had concerns as well. She believes I am slowing down my life for him and worries that, over time, I may resent carrying more of the financial and emotional weight in the relationship.

Earlier this year, he paid lobola, and we’ve since moved in together. But the truth is … my mother’s words never really left me. My fiance inherited a small business from his father. He is hardworking, ambitious, and driven, but parts of his life still feel unstable to me. He doesn’t own a car yet; some of his finances aren’t fully structured; and, when I asked recently whether his business had the correct documentation for us to apply for a home loan next year, he admitted he wasn’t sure and would need to sort it out. That answer unsettled me more than I expected.

I’m a qualified professional and am doing very well in my career. Lately, I’ve started questioning whether we are truly financially compatible. Sometimes it feels like I’m the one planning, thinking ahead, and building for the future while he is still trying to catch up. What scares me is that the excitement I once felt about marriage is fading. Some days, I even wonder if I would be financially better off on my own. And as painful as it is to admit, I can’t honestly say that being with him has significantly improved my life financially. Now we’re close to signing, and I’m sitting with serious doubts.

Did my mother see something I refused to see? Am I overthinking this … or ignoring realities that will matter deeply later on? And maybe the hardest question of all is this: Am I questioning this relationship because he truly cannot meet me where I am … or because I’ve started measuring love through the lens of fear, status, and financial performance?

Annonymous”

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The Blind Spot is brought to you by Metropolitan.

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