
a week later, 36‑year‑old Polina Dibrova answered on the Peregovorka show (Radio 1 and Prorusk.tv ), insisting that sixteen years together, three children and the shared effort to build a business cannot be erased with a sentence, and that she has been unfairly written off as an idle housewife when “everyone has their own truth”; her version begins with Dmitry telling her from the start that she would not work and that nannies and housekeepers would run the household, even saying after the registry signing, “you sleep with me, not the baby,” which led to a round‑the‑clock nanny who would wake Polina at two a.m. to soothe and feed the child before she returned to bed while Dibrov feared the chemistry between them would fade; Polina notes that Kudryavtseva never lived in their home and judges by hearsay, while friends still recall her rushing about with borscht and pies — domestic tasks she once loved before launching a beauty salon and later another business — and observes that when a wife vanishes into household chores a man can grow bored, whereas her being engaged used to mobilize him, though in their case “mobilization” translated into more frequent business trips and leaving her alone on the home front; she says she holds no rancor now, hopes life will set things right, and believes the essential thing is that the children know their mother is not an enemy, because a house filled with a child’s laughter will feel like home even if it has become someone else’s.
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