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Episode 4: âThe Train Station.â Now married, Paulina moves in with Bobbyâs family in Orange County and is met with a host of expectations: cooking, cleaning, serving, working at the psychic shop and having children. This kind of family dynamic has helped keep the Romani culture alive across the centuries. But it still catches Paulina by surprise.
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No one pictures their âhappily ever afterâ by thinking of all the household chores theyâre going to do. And yet, so much of married life is made up of just that: scheduling, paying bills, shopping, cooking, cleaning â the tasks and duties that make a household work. But who wants to fantasize about that?
Paulina Stevens was ushered into marriage at age 17 with several daysâ worth of festivities, three showstopping dresses and an heirloom crown. But after she moved into her husbandâs familyâs home, reality hit her like a big splash of cold water.
If sheâd only had to become a wife, that would have been one thing. But the biggest adjustment Paulina had to make was becoming a daughter-in-law. Suddenly the family friends sheâd known all her life were the heads of her household. That distinction changed their entire dynamic.
It felt like my relationship started to shift from Day 1.⌠Every day, it just kept getting weirder and weirder.
— Paulina Stevens in âForetoldâ
Paulina thought she knew what would be expected of her.
Just wake up and make sure everythingâs cleaned. Serve your father-in-law coffee, and whoever else is at the house. Stand up if someone walks in the room. Youâre cooking breakfast, lunch and dinner. Go to the market. And thatâs how you make them proud.
— Paulina Stevens in âForetoldâ
But it wasnât just a series of tasks. It was a whole mentality. Paulina describes having to adopt a mindset centered on pleasing the men â and, as she tells it, the person enforcing those expectations was her mother-in-law, Ruby.
My mother-in-law would come in and say, âI know youâre tired. I know youâre exhausted, but your father-in-law really wants you to singâŚ. Please just perform and serve a little bit. He wants to see your face. He wants to make sure that youâre doing what you gotta do.â
— Paulina Stevens in âForetoldâ
At first glance, it could be easy to see Ruby as a villain. Paulina recalls being corrected and scolded over the simplest things, like which direction cups should face when put away in a cabinet. She recalls needing to dress well even while doing chores â exhaustedly scrubbing piles of dishes while wearing dresses and heels. Paulina recalls crying in the only place she could find privacy: the shower.
Why didnât Ruby show compassion?
Well â maybe that was compassion.
Thereâs a lot we canât know about Ruby because she wouldnât speak with us, but by Paulinaâs account, Rubyâs daily grind and, before that, her experiences as a daughter-in-law were very difficult. Ruby, too, must have gone through the culture shock of integrating into a new family and living up to their expectations. But she emerged triumphant, as her familyâs matriarch.
Ruby figured out how to make the best of her time as a daughter-in-law. Maybe she was trying to show Paulina how to do the same.
Ruby considered us â she would say, âWeâre on the same team.â And I believed that at the time. We both just wanted to make the men happy, I guess.
— Paulina Stevens in âForetoldâ
Itâs a very human response. Maybe itâs a coping mechanism. Regardless of the psychology behind it, the pattern repeats itself. People who succeed within a system often reinforce the system rather than try to change it. Itâs internalized. And eventually they become the system.
As square as that sounds, itâs surprisingly easy to do, especially for women who are conditioned to âgo alongâ pretty much from birth. If youâve ever noticed women congregating in the kitchen and cleaning up while men hang around somewhere else, especially during the holidays, youâve seen this dynamic play out, too.
When a system is that deeply entrenched, it might feel like the best way to help younger women cope is to help them conform.
A part of me was like, âHow do you even do it all? How are you happy like this?â I feel like she wanted me to be her. And to a certain degree, I felt like I was turning into her.
— Paulina Stevens in âForetoldâ
So Paulina went along. She tried to follow the path. But she couldnât stick to it forever, and that positioned her and Ruby to clash.
â JazmĂn Aguilera and Lauren Raab
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About 'Foretold'
Theme music by seven-string guitarist and composer Vadim Kolpakov and composer Alex PGSV. Additional original music by Vadim Kolpakov and Alex PGSV, as well as Alex Higgins. Fact checking by Helen Li, Lauren Raab, Asal Ehsanipour and Faith E. Pinho. Additional research by Scott Wilson.
Thanks to Shani Hilton, Kevin Merida, Brandon Sides, Dylan Harris, Carrie Shemanski, Kayla Bell and Nicolas Perez.