Entry tags:
Dear Abby: couple with different educations
DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend and I have been dating for two years. He is in grad school. I failed out of community college. My lack of education stresses me out emotionally. I love him very much, and I see a future with him. But the idea of an architect and a community college dropout makes my heart ache. He deserves someone more on his intellectual level. He is originally from another state and this is one of the reasons why I haven't met his family.
I have thought about trying to get a degree to become a certified nursing assistant, but again there would be a gap in our professional levels. I'm afraid that when he does introduce me to his family they will convince him he's better off without me. Part of me believes it's true.
Please give me advice about what to do. I don't want to lose him, but at the same time, I want him to be happy. -- UNEQUAL IN WISCONSIN
DEAR UNEQUAL: I can't help but wonder if you have ever spoken with someone who does career counseling. Some universities and community colleges have extension divisions that offer it. Part of the counseling involves aptitude testing, which could help you determine what you would be good at.
Being a nursing assistant is a respectable career that involves responsibility and people skills. If you feel drawn to it, then that's what you should pursue, and you should not feel embarrassed or have a need to apologize for it.
I have thought about trying to get a degree to become a certified nursing assistant, but again there would be a gap in our professional levels. I'm afraid that when he does introduce me to his family they will convince him he's better off without me. Part of me believes it's true.
Please give me advice about what to do. I don't want to lose him, but at the same time, I want him to be happy. -- UNEQUAL IN WISCONSIN
DEAR UNEQUAL: I can't help but wonder if you have ever spoken with someone who does career counseling. Some universities and community colleges have extension divisions that offer it. Part of the counseling involves aptitude testing, which could help you determine what you would be good at.
Being a nursing assistant is a respectable career that involves responsibility and people skills. If you feel drawn to it, then that's what you should pursue, and you should not feel embarrassed or have a need to apologize for it.

no subject
And in neither case is the remedy career counseling; that's just going to make LW more nervous without addressing the actual problem, which is either boyfriend's willingness to go to bat for her or her own anxiety. (Or both. Both is also a possibility.)
no subject
That said: sometimes differing levels of education can be an issue because it leads to difficulties in common interests and conversations. However, the LW doesn't mention that except as "intellectual equal," and seems much more concerned with her own and (possibly others') perceptions of educational status. Being a CNA is a tough, necessary job (they're a godsend when one is hospitalized), and I would hope his family wouldn't be that status-obsessed.
That said (tangent alert), one of the things I've noticed, particularly living in a university town, is a general perception that a woman's social status is raised by her husband's profession (being the wife of a lawyer or professor confers a certain social status), but the husband's is not raised by the wife's profession. I mean, duh, patriarchy with a really good, solid dose of classism, but I'm sort of wondering how her worries are fed by/indicate a change in that dynamic.
no subject
*Her writing is solid if a little choppy, so I'm kind of curious as to the reasons she failed out. There are many, many reasons people don't succeed at higher ed, especially at CCs, and intellect is not the only or even most common one.
no subject
no subject
There is nothing a priori about different levels of education and different status levels of employment that means anything in a couple. There's lots of circumstantial stuff and specific-to-the-couple-stuff which will of course interact with that context, as with every context, but in and of itself: nah.
Is there an indication I'm missing making it clear the LW is a woman? As if it were same-gender pairing you add yet ANOTHER area of fraught, I note.
(This kind of stuff drives me wild. I had something in my sink fixed the other week and an apprentice came with the plumber who was fixing it, which I highly approve of, and he had a little haha-nervous moment, looking at my bookshelves, of "man now I feel undereducated".
I restrained myself from ranting about stupid human status markers and instead just pointed out that I literally didn't know what to call what was wrong with my sink and he was able to fix it very competently, at 17, with minimal supervision from his senior? So seriously here. SKILL IS CONTEXTUAL.)
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Like I could understand if LW were just coming from "he's really good at his field and I don't even have one" - that part in and of itself can be difficult! But the hesitation in re nursing assistant part makes it clear that at least MOST of what's going on is stupid human-ape status crap. And that just, flames, side of my face. Argh.
no subject