I woke up this afternoon feeling so strange. It’s not my room, it’s not my bed, and nothing feels familiar. My family isn’t here, and suddenly there’s a man, my husband, sharing my personal space for the first time. I don’t even know how to explain it, but I feel like an impostor just walking around and doing things in this place.

  • Lovable Sidekick@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    My most lasting memory is of being at the grocery store and noticing peach pies on sale. I suddenly realized I was an actual grownup and could just buy one and eat as much of it as I wanted. So I did, and ate peach pie all weekend.

  • HubertManne@piefed.social
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    10 hours ago

    Welll… first off I lived alone before getting married and much of that was in college in dorms. You seem to have a lot of change all at once.

  • zxqwas@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    I moved out at 18 for university. I was too busy with all the other stuff to think much about it.

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠@slrpnk.net
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    14 hours ago

    Freedom. But I was leaving into a college dorm, and both my roommates were upperclassmen that I wouldn’t see for another week.

    But it was also far from my first time sleeping alone in an unfamiliar place — I’d done a lot of solo camping by that point in my life.

  • halfpipe@sopuli.xyz
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    16 hours ago

    My first reaction to this post was based on my own life, a Millennial who grew up in a first-world country, a country in which, even during childhood, there’s a strong emphasis on personal freedom and independence.

    If there were an inner-jacket blurb on the novel of my life it would read something like: childhood bike riding out into the suburbs until sunset without a cell phone, driving everywhere on my own at age 16, moving away to college and meeting someone who I loved while living on the other side of the country, and ultimately moving across the country to start a career that I wanted and marry the girl of my dreams.

    Above that blurb or below it would be a little American flag :p

    Most of the comments here are all going to have experiences closer to mine than yours, in Saudi, as a woman.

    Most of the comments here that echo fear and isolation are from people compelled to be on their own suddenly, abruptly, and without a plan. This sounds closer to your situation than those of us who, say, moved ourselves into college dormitories and brought our roommates home to meet our families on weekends so we could do laundry in clean washing machines and for a couple days trade our diets of instant ramen for fully-stocked refrigerators.

    For us, waking up next to a strange man in a house where nothing is “ours” is completely and utterly foreign.

    How that would feel is scary. How that would feel is permanent. How that would feel is like abduction.

    I wonder if your husband feels the same.

    Every married couple knows the feeling of keeping a secret from their spouse, and likewise the pressure release of finally telling them and having them not leave, or get mad, but look at you and say “That sucks,” and that they understand.

    You’re getting a lot of advice about creating routines, putting up pictures, about making this unfamiliar space and unfamiliar time more like it’s yours.

    My advice? Do this as a team. Tell your husband how you’re feeling. Go do something with your husband and take a photo. Put that photo on the wall. Don’t simply decorate your life with evidence of just how foreign all of this is to you.

    It’ll be tough for a while but you’re smart enough to be bilingual and navigate the Fediverse, so I think you’ll be all right.

  • frustrated_phagocytosis@fedia.io
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    17 hours ago

    Glorious. I was already living part time elsewhere during high school. I only came home around 2 am to shower, change, sleep before leaving for school in the morning. I moved out as soon as possible after graduation and never went back. I’ve got tons of debt and no savings but staying at home was not safe physically or mentally.

  • Pommes_für_dein_Balg@feddit.org
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    17 hours ago

    Scary as fuck. Alone in my first apartment, in a strange city where I knew no one.
    The first night I stood in front of my bedroom window looking at the city outside and cried from fear.

  • Weirdfish@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Nothing unusual about it. As others suggested, take time to make the place feel yours, through decorating, routine, etc.

    This is just something that takes a bit of time, especially since it is your first time in a new home without your family.

    My first living away from home was a college dorm, and it did take a few weeks for it to feel like mine.

    Even now at 50 moving into a new place feels odd for a bit.

  • Today@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    I just saw on your previous post that you’re in Saudi and this is your first romantic relationship. Would you like to share a bit about the process - How well do you know your new husband? Is there attraction/interest/like or love? How much contact do you have with your family? Do you have friends who are married that you can talk to?

    I think my kids felt weird when they went to college- not home, not their bed, strangers for roommates. But that was a temporary and they came home pretty regularly in the beginning.

    • Yasmeen@lemmy.worldOP
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      16 hours ago

      I met him for the first time last March, and he proposed the following April. We spent time together and talked regularly from then until we got married, but there was always a wall between us, nothing romantic or physical. So I wouldn’t say I know him incredibly well on a personal level, since it’s only now that we’re able to interact without restrictions. I definitely like him and I’m attracted to him, but I don’t think love has really had a chance to develop yet. I have as much contact with my family and friends as I want, and I do have married friends and relatives I can talk to.

  • velma@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    18 hours ago

    It will take time for this new space to feel like your own! This is very normal. Start building your new routines - make the tea or coffee in the morning, plan out your day, start to incorporate little touches of your own through the house. One day you’ll wake up and feel like this was always home.

    Have you put up any pictures yet? That can really help make a space feel more personal.

    • Eq0@literature.cafe
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      17 hours ago

      Expanding on this: it’s a great time to challenge your assumptions and try building ip different routines! Be mindful to not “get stuck” on routines and habits you don’t like

  • Imperious_melange@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    Left home with nothing but the clothes on my back. Thankfully my HS girlfriend and her parents let me stay with them. Had to buy clothes with the $400 I had and was riding my bike to my minimum wage job. It was simple times but good times.