THIS. I have several single friends that are in their late 30s and early 40s and they are still searching for a man that does not exist. Their lists are crazy! |
Thus is some misogynistic bullshit. The women I know who are lucky in love are beautiful, warm, and intelligent. And often cheerful/optimistic people that radiate positive energy. That is it. |
| I'll add a bit.... The women I know who havr the above three traits and also tons of emotional intelligence have had men clamoring for them their entire lives. |
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I'm 40 and have several friends who didn't marry until their late 30s and a few who are in their 40s and have never been married. Those friends are incredibly picky about men and have some issues - low self-esteem, drama -filled, unrealistic expectations about themselves and life, lack of self-awareness, etc. They are all great friends and wonderful women, but they are a MESS when it comes to romantic relationships.
Funny, but most of my friends who ended up marrying in their late 30s married men that they never would've given the time of day to 5+ years earlier. |
Wow, you are a mean sister. |
I do not think height matters one iota if the woman is proportional. |
+1. |
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The people I know who married in their early 20s by and large met their spouses through college (or while they were in college) and occasionally even before that.
You need to make it a priority in college to meet someone if that's what you care about. Get in a relationship before the end of senior year. |
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1. The grass is not always greener. 2. Luck and coincidence. 3. Having said that, I don't believe people who marry early lower their standards or act out of ignorance/impulsivity. |
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A lot of it is luck. That can't be overstated enough.
But I think some of it is also whether you like comfort or excitement. I met my future husband at 19. We clicked right away. We just kept dating and it went well so I never saw a reason to rock the boat. We ended up getting married 5 years into dating and are still happily married now 15 years later. I think some people would have been bored by that type of monogamy and looked around for someone "better" but I was happy and saw no reason to do that. |
I met my future husband at 19. He was my third boyfriend. We have a successful, fulfilling, happy marriage. Married 15 years, together 20, 3 kids. So now you have a larger sample size. |
I've kept in touch with a couple classmates who did that 30 years ago. One is a storybook couple of two brainiacs who are silly in love, kind and deeply embedded in their community. The other married at 22, had three kids and is now (nastily) divorced as well as estranged from two of her kids whose lives have descended into substance abuse and poverty. Others married people they met later and also had a range of experiences. Anecdotes can teach us so much! |
I just fell asleep reading your description. I can't imagine meeting anyone that boring IRL |
In my case, I think it was goid decision making at a young age (20). Nearly 30 years later, it is the best decision I have made. |
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I responded on the first page but for some reason this topic interests me so I am going to keep responding. And while I am married, I don't even necessarily like the institution of marriage, though I liked something I read in an American Marriage when the character said something to the effect of: Marriage is the closest thing to what I want. (too lazy to find the exact quote - I should have highlighted it). Anyway - just laying out all my baggage right there up front.
I don't necessarily believe that there is only ONE soulmate for everyone. A lot of people are saying luck and I don't disagree but part of what I consider to be luck is - in right place at the right time. When you're ready to settle down, etc. I think I probably could have married an earlier BF or two if the timing was different. We were too young / I was too immature doing stupid stuff like talking to other guys / etc. But if the timing was different, who knows. |