You are missing that there are very important financial implications down the line, and that this is all her father cares about, and he is right to do so. This isn't about "how it looks". It's about who will help OP take care of the child financially. Who supports OP when she gets mommy-tracked. Who will pay for college. Who will inherit what. And these considerations are EXACTLY why OP's significant other is stalling. He's realizing this too. Reject tradition at your own risk, PP. This is about money. |
Well, if your SO dies before the baby is born you will sure wish you had been married. |
| OP, my MIL’’s husband (not DH’s father, thank God), was irate when his adult son’s GF got pregnant. Even tried to bribe them with money to get married. Said, “I want nothing to do with that bastard child when he’s born.” (Yep, he’s a real prince). Anyway, fast forward, that grandson is massively adored, the couple never did get married, everything worked out just fine. I tell you this just to give you hope that once the baby is born that everyone moves on from their ridiculous stance. Good luck. |
|
OP, you are presenting your family as unsupportive - when you and your SO are so unsupportive of each other that you can't even take the step to get married. Get married already. Then maybe you'll have the respect of others.
OR don't get married. But you can't force people to respect you. They don't have to. |
|
Your father cares about you and wants to make sure that your SO doesn't leave you high and dry. He also wants to be at your wedding because you're his daughter, even more meaningful for him to be there after your mom passed.
Agree.. just get a quickie license and do it at the courthouse. NBD. Congrats. |
+1 I would not feel comfortable with this situation either. I got married at 33, btw, and had my first at almost 35. No way would I have a child without the full legal financial support of the dad. |
I'm the PP above. My parents had me before they got married. I was a flower girl at their wedding. My grandfather cared about me getting baptized more than he cared about his daughter getting married Nobody pressured my mother too much to get married, because my father was just at the start of his career and not making much - the expectation was that they would get married in due course, which they did, 3 years later. But OP's boyfriend is much older and is already established. He should know better than to leave OP hanging. The civil contract needs to be signed before the birth.
|
You aren't married and pregnant. You don't need a wedding all dressed in virginal white with a modest veil to hide your virginal face. Get married so this child isn't thought of as illegitimate and have a party after child is born. |
So you also got together with this guy right when your mother died? *
And you’re talking about the custom diamond engagement ring you're waiting for right now? OP sad to say I think your priorities are out of whack. You went off of Pinterest-wedding-track when you got pregnant. Put your Mom thinking cap on and get your ducks in a row and file with this person at the earliest available date. The ring and the parties are trappings and a really stupid reason to delay what actually matters, legal status. |
Exactly. |
|
OP, you get married before this child is born. As others have pointed out you need to be thinking long term and I mean 20+ years down the line! Children are expensive.
Listen to your father and start acting like a 35 year old unmarried pregnant woman! |
|
When you get pregnant at 17 to another with no job, it doesn't matter if you get married or not. Neither can support the other.
When you're 35 and get pregnant to an older guy with money... you get married unless you've already had a stellar career, millions in the bank, and it matters to you that no one else has parental rights over the child. Do you see what we mean, OP? |
|
OP, I'd respond to any comment about rushing things or worry that he's being forced into marriage by gushing with happiness: We're just so blessed as to not need fertility treatments at our ages. We'd already been talking marriage and both wanted kids, so life has a way of working out. We're just so happy and lucky how it's all turning out, and after being interested in each other for 17 years. By this time next year I'll be fully settled with a husband and baby, and (boyfriend) is going to be the best dad.
You *can* change the narrative by gushing and being happy. If you are hesitant and embarrassed everyone is going to worry and question. You both need to show confidence in your next steps for others to feel comfortable too. |
Right but OP is insisting that both she and her SO want to be married, but she’s hanging on to stupidity like “waiting for a surprise proposal because I still want some traditional things,” so she does not share your worldview. OP the real, proper, traditional thing to do in this scenario is to marry quietly and quickly. Stop being so undignified and shallow and just go to the courthouse over the holidays |
It's obvious OP is unstable. |