Welcome to Tough Love. We鈥檙e answering your questions about dating, breakups, and everything in between. Our advice giver is Blair Braverman, dogsled racer and author of and . Have a question of your own? Write to us at聽toughlove@outsideinc.com.
My husband and I bought forested land a few years ago to live on with our family. We currently have one young daughter, but we hope to have more kids in the future. We are all pretty comfortable living with the bare essentials, but the plan was that eventually my husband would build a cabin. In the meantime, we moved an RV onto the land. Unfortunately, my husband has to travel for work to support us and is often on the road, so he hasn鈥檛 made progress on the cabin. My daughter and I love it here and we both are doing well, but we鈥檙e usually alone.
I don鈥檛 mind living in the RV, and right now it works well for us, although I know that as my daughter gets older she鈥檒l need more space. Right now, my more immediate concern is storage. We have a number of tools and machinery that I use to maintain the land, including a lawn mower, snow blower, and chainsaw. Also shovels and saws and other tools, and our bicycles. We have no garage or place to store them so that they will be protected and remain well-maintained.聽
I want to buy a container and have it put on the land so we can use it to store equipment. This would be affordable for us and would also allow me to move some things out of the RV (like aseasonal clothing) so that we鈥檇 have more space. However, my husband is extremely against this idea, because he says that a container would 鈥渟ully the landscape鈥 and ruin its natural beauty. The look of a container doesn鈥檛 bother me but even if it did, it would be worth it for the storage. Also there鈥檚 the risk that our equipment will break if it鈥檚 not protected. If our snowblower breaks, who鈥檚 going to be shoveling by hand? Me.聽
This has become a real sticking point for us. I think he feels guilty about not having a cabin yet. He doesn鈥檛 like traveling and is frustrated that he can鈥檛 be here building the cabin. I have tried to explain to him that I鈥檓 not upset with him; I just really need the storage. How do we reconcile this?
I think you can be sensitive to your husband鈥檚 frustration, and to the sacrifice he makes by having to work so much, without conceding your quality of life to protect his ego. The simple answer is that you should add a container to the land right now, but remove it once you have a cabin with more space. After all, that鈥檚 the beauty of containers: they鈥檙e easy to move (and move again). This compromise fits everyone鈥檚 needs, and anyway, the storage and flexibility offered by the container would probably make the cabin-building process easier in the first place. Although your husband might grumble, I hope he would agree to this solution.
However, this doesn鈥檛 solve your deeper problems, which are both practical and emotional. The practical problem is that you don鈥檛 have a cabin and will need one soon. The emotional problem is that your husband feels anxious and guilty about falling short on a dream. In this case, the emotional problem is blocking your ability to talk openly about the practical problem, because your husband feels too bad about it all to look at the situation objectively.
There鈥檚 a cynical quality in readers of advice columns to assume the worst of a letter-writer鈥檚 significant other, and I suspect that some readers here will jump to the conclusion that your husband is choosing to be away or has decided not to prioritize your living situation. If you sense that to be the case, I鈥檇 encourage you to trust your instincts and take steps accordingly. However, for these purposes, I鈥檓 going to assume that your husband is doing what he can to be home as much as possible while also supporting his family鈥攚hich must be incredibly frustrating and discouraging for him.
It鈥檚 hard for someone to admit that they鈥檙e falling short of a goal or dream, particularly when that dream involves caring for their loved ones. For your husband to admit that you aren鈥檛聽about to have a cabin any second now聽would mean acknowledging that despite all of his efforts and sacrifices, his dream鈥攂uilding a cabin where you can all live together鈥攊s taking much longer than he expected, and is still probably farther off than he wants to admit. I suspect that that鈥檚 his real objection to the container. It鈥檚 not that seeing the container would bother him because it sullies the landscape. It鈥檚 that seeing the container would bother him because it鈥檚 a huge visual reminder that his plans haven鈥檛 worked out as he first wanted, even though he鈥檚 doing everything he can to achieve them.
Of course, just because a goal takes longer to achieve doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 not happening鈥攁nd that you won鈥檛 someday look back on this time, as you sit together in your cozy cabin, and feel like it鈥檚 all very distant indeed. But it鈥檚 important that you and your husband are able to talk聽together and figure out where you are in this process, so that you can make appropriate plans. Look at your finances, your supplies, your time commitments, and your plans鈥攊ncluding what your daughter needs now, what she鈥檒l need in the imminent future, and what any other kids will need, too, plus what you鈥檒l need if and when you鈥檙e pregnant again. Realistically, how does the time frame and expense of building a cabin fit into all this? Are there other reasonable options, like buying a movable cabin, trailer, or mini-barn and personalizing it yourselves? If you both want your husband to be home more, then he could consider other options for work, too, if he hasn鈥檛 already. Overall, you need to make sure that your dreams don鈥檛 just work for your future selves, but for you聽now, too鈥攁nd though there are plenty of ways to get there, I think getting a container, in the meantime, could be a stepping stone along the way.