Recently in Taiwan, a user has shared her incident on a Facebook confession page.
In her post, she said:
“I’m 28 years old and earn about $58,000TWD(RM8,618.80) per month. I recently bought my own house, and the mortgage is around $26,000TWD(RM3,863.60). When my boyfriend and his family discovered that I bought my own house, they got furious and repeatedly told me that this matter is unacceptable to them.”
“They kept questioning why I had to buy my own house, and they already have their own house. I know I can afford the mortgage, and I never asked him or his family for any money when I bought it.”
“I don’t understand why it is so hard for them to understand or accept. I’m starting to doubt if our life values are aligned. I just bought a house; why does it seem like they’ve just been told they cannot inherit their ancestor’s inheritance?”
Many netizens were quick to share their thoughts and here’s what some of them said:
“It’s too bad that he can’t accept it, can I move in?”
“You are you and he is him, your capabilities probably has made him feel inferior.”
“I think this house has brought you so much luck! You’re able to see your partner and family’s true colours.”
“Because this is considered as a premarital asset, he wouldn’t get anything out of it.”
“You bought your own house, what has it got to do with him? Even if you wanted to buy a few bags or a few more houses, do you need his permission?”
As social media users, we’d occasionally stumble across different types of ‘confessions’ on Facebook. Some may be serious, amusing, or outright ridiculous. As it’s an anonymous post, we’d also remind everyone to take it with a pinch of salt.
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