Shammful. |
It’s immature to make it out of school yet not be able to both spell and to check what you just typed. |
| Marriage is a failing institution. It’s the like life or marriage is easier if you marry late. Most people marry much later and still can’t handle relationships or fidelity. Their collective skepticism is understandable. Don’t worry about it and do what makes you happy. If they are of legal age, educated, employed and committed, no one has a right to make their decisions for them. |
I fully admit thwt I was immature to laugh at this, but it was funny. |
DH and I got married at 22. We are 55. Married 33 years. My parents got married at 21 and 23. They just celebrated 58 years of marriage. DH's parents got married at 20 and 26. They have been married for 60 years. My sister got married at 22. Her DH was 23. They have been married for 29 years. My other sister got married at 19. Her DH was 23. They have been married for almost 30 years. My oldest got married at 25. His wife was 22. They have been married for seven years. ...Given the divorce rate in this country, our "brains" seem to have been more mature than most. |
| It gives people something to talk about and takes focus away from their own inadequacies and failures. |
Dh and I met at 20, knew we wanted to marry each other by 22 and finally married at 28. We've been happily married for 22 years. If we could do it all over again, we would've married at 22 and started our family earlier. We are 50 with tweens, which is great in some ways (more $$, more maturity), but not so great in others (worn down, tired, wanting more time to ourselves). I think they should go for it. When you know, you know. |
Yeah, and I don’t believe a college educated 22 year old would fail to correct this particular word twice, as op did. I work with teenagers and have a young adult child: “shaming”/“shamed” is common parlance with them. And it is a word that would not be changed by autocorrect because it is so commonly used this way. But I do think op is a 22 year old. |
It's far more likely that you are part of a family/culture that just stays married no matter how unhappy you are or how dysfunctional your marriage is. The metric we are looking to measure is not longevity, it's satisfaction/happy/functional. The two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive, nor are they necessarily synonymous. Some people stay married no matter what - abuse, infidelity, etc. - and one thing that is going largely unsaid here is that sometimes people who marry young don't know BAD when they see it, or have so little independence - financial or emotional - that they can't leave even if they SHOULD leave. |
| I see nothing wrong with getting married early - and don't understand the people who say that twenty year olds are supposed to just work and travel. Why can't married twenty year olds work and travel? DH and I started dating when I was 20, married at 24, but held off on having kids until later - we worked on our careers and housing and traveled all over the world before we had our children. We had a blast. |
Hmm, you sound awfully miserable, don’t you? Not once did I say my marriage was perfect, only that getting married young did not appear to disadvantage us relative to our peers. And with 15 great years in the bank, I have zero regrets, regardless of what may come. Getting married young can be great. It’s also ok to get married later in life. Or not at all. Lots of acceptable choices exist, no need to judge. |
Good for you and no where has anyone said you can't travel while young and married. Haven't you heard the expression "foot loose and fancy free?" This is something I am encouraging my kids to do..learn to live with yourself before you have to consider your spouse's feelings and desires. You make all the decisions yourself.. ( within reason, of course) now do you get it? |
| I think it's funny in the thread where someone asks if 30 is too old to find a dh in DC, everyone replied yes, you need to land a dh by 22 and in a thread about someone landing a dh at 22, everyone is like, you shouldn't get married before 30. |
Yeah. No. The women in my family don’t do anything because they are forced. We are all strong, intelligent, educated women. It’s actually laughable to think any of us would stay in an unhappy marriage. DH and I are very happily married. Empty nesters with five adult children. All happy, healthy, educated, with great jobs. If it makes you feel better to believe that everyone who married young is miserable, then you do you. |
Good for them. I think it's better when a couple can build a life together. If they found their spouse early that's great. The pickings aren't that great in 10 years. |