Contents
The right to personal property is one of the rights of a family member, enshrined in the Family Constitution.
The right to personal property is based on the rule of territories: on my territory I am the master, on yours you are the master, on the common territory all issues are resolved by joint discussion. See Territory Rule
My options and rights
I am the master of my personal territory. My territory — I am the owner here, I freely decide everything, I can change my life without consultations.
What to eat for the husband — the husband decides, and the wife must do what the husband wants. Although it is reasonable and pleasant to ask the opinion of your beloved wife.
Personal territory is not only property, time and friends, these are also topics (questions) that concern me personally and no one else. See Personal and General Topics
Duty to respect the frontier
You can’t climb into someone else’s territory without permission.
If this is not my territory, but yours, I cannot press, interfere, demand explanations, I can only make requests and mild personal opinions.
If the question concerns my male affairs, and they do not affect anyone else, the wife can express her personal opinion, but God forbid something more than that.
If this is my territory, you cannot enter my territory. You can ask, you can’t demand or get angry.
What to watch on TV for a wife in the absence of her husband or whether to write down the daily routine in the morning is not a question of the husband, this is the territory of the wife. What ue to wear to her husband when he goes to the store is his question.
Duty of self-service
From the right to personal property follows the duty of self-service.
I pay for my territory myself: time, effort, money. On my territory, I take on all my problems, I solve them myself. My territory — no one is obliged to solve my problems. See Self Service
Is it possible to lose the right to your territory?
Yes, you can. If you stop serving yourself on your territory and hang your problems on others, they can use their right to acquire rights and declare this part of your territory to be common, or even their own.
Related topics
- Territory rule
- The right to mental health protection.
- Right to debate.
- Right to acquire rights
- The right to a clear conscience.
- The right of equality in discussion.
- The right to enforce agreements.
- family constitution