It's not an attack. It's my opinion. We were never having an argument based on fact. It was based on feeling from the first word. |
Just wondering how needing both of your extended family's approvals has worked out for your marriage. |
It is your opinion that a PP's marriage is sad? Which one, and why? Or are you just attacking someone for supporting marriage? |
So far, so good. He'd have to do something really horrible for me to divorce him and upset his parents, whom I so dearly love. |
YES, this exactly. BTDT. I stayed in a crappy relationship for longer than I would have bc I didn't have any other options. Not ideal. That being said, I also lived with DH before we got married and it was awesome. |
I would love to see a list of these rights. My BF and I have been together a long time--4 kids, joint property etc. We've been together so long that the train screaming marry me has long left the station. We're just an old couple now. I have yet to see a right that I need/want and can't get through other means. But I can clearly see the difference in our taxes from filing as 2 single adults to filing as married couple. At this point, it's the marriage penalty that prevents us from legally getting married. There needs to be some other benefit that will make up for the higher taxes. |
Oh, you're right silly me. I guess I was just thinking that a formal/traditional church wedding (going in front of God) is an ideal wedding to many of us. Circumstances may warrant another approach, of course. The important thing is that the two people love each other and are committed to making their union last. Venue is secondary. It is nice when you can have both, but sometimes that just isn't going to happen - at least have the first . Sorry if I've rambled OT.
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Yes. It is my opinion that a PP's marriage is sad. I find it sad because she is so rigid in her beliefs that it can't be enjoyable for anyone involved. I actually support marriage. It is a wonderful thing for some people. I'm not against it. |
| I find it sad that you make snap judgments with very little to go on. |
I was given plenty to go on. |
I think when you get married many people don't realize all the rights being conferred in marriage, I know I didn't, and many of those things are the furthest from your mind until something happens like the spouse cheats and when you look to divorce you see that he/she is entitled to half your pension etc. By the other side of the coin many people living together haven't thought thru all the things they give up legally speaking by not being married until something happens like your loved one is injured and you can't make any of the care decisions etc. In some ways, you can be more a la carte in the LTR, for example you don't want your boyfriend to be entitled to your 401K if you split up but you want to split the house. You start from all these rights for the spouse when you are married and have to be deliberate in taking any away, like having a pre-nup while you start with no rights by being a live-in girlfriend/boyfriend and have to be deliberate in adding them in. Legal reasons aside, if my daughters truly never wanted to get married, I'm talking if Prince Charming rode up on a white horse and asked to marry her she would turn him down because she didn't believe in martiage ...I would have no problems with her living with her boyfriend. I wouldn't feel like she was settling for something she didn't want in order to be with him. I always think back to the Harry met Sally comment when she says "all this time I've been saying that he didn't want to get married. But the truth is that he didn't want to marry me." I don't want my daughters to be married to the wrong person but I also don't want them to stay living with someone that isn't ready to commit in the legal sense (either thru marriage in the near term or coming the closest you could get to the legal protections in marriage while living together) |