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Not really, no.
Americans Are Getting Married Older Than Ever https://www.statista.com/chart/7031/americans-are-tying-the-knot-older-than-ever/ |
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I don’t know anyone that married in their 30s that was in a serious relationship in their early 20s and then broke up with their SO at the time because pop-culture I guess told them they should.
It was because they hadn’t found someone yet and yes you focus on a career in your 20s. Every example provided above is of people finding someone in college and getting married…none are single 21 year olds finding someone post-college and then marrying at 22. There were always the college couples that stayed together and married young. I don’t think the overall statistics are much different anecdotes aside. |
| Recently attended a wedding of my 23 year old niece. (High school sweethearts who went to the same college.) I’m in my late 40s and every single one of my college friends who married before age 25 is divorced, so we’ll see. |
I was career motivated, so was my spouse. We got married when I finished college (he'd finished 2 years earlier). Same career path, ended up at same company. Focused on our careers for 7 years then had kids. 30+ years strong. But I'll admit we are both unusually mature and focused. Getting married that young is not for everyone. |
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Almost half of my niece's cohort in dental school is already committed, engaged or married.
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Again...those aren't numbers comporting with anyone doing something unusually young. I assume the %age married is quite low...but that means that 40%ish of the ages of 21/22 - 24/25 are committed or engaged and will marry at 25 - 26...and that 50% of the class probably won't find a SO and get married until like 30ish. |
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>25% of 40 year olds have never been married
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/06/28/a-record-high-share-of-40-year-olds-in-the-us-have-never-been-married/ |
| It’s a trend, yes. The ones doing it for that reason won’t last. |
| I doubt its a trend, more like refusal to follow the trend. |
| Women who got married in their 30s will act like that was their plan all along, but we all know they wanted to get that done before 30 but couldn't find a man their age willing to commit. The newer generations of young men are not afraid of marriage like their fathers were. |
This. The young men these days are sick of hookup culture, which they saw in the generation ahead of them. They are relationship driven |
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Financial hurdles and commitment phobias are bigger factors than focus on careers. Mythical broad brush of 'all 20's marriage bad and all 30's and 40's marriages good', plays a significant role in people aimlessly wandering from relationship to relationship, avoiding commitment.
No one mentions that after 35, they'll be settling quickly for whatever is leftover and facing issues driven by incompatibility, infertility and relationship baggage collected over a decade. |
Bingo. People who are less focused on school/career are more likely to get married young. 1972 GenX, very few college/grad school peers married <30. |
| I’m very confused about why being married makes it impossible to go to graduate school or have a good job? I found it much easier to achieve things in life with a spouse as support. |
I guess the others in this thread don’t like facts. This basically ends the conversation. |