Not true, only good for big, visible or ugly tattoos unless you are Amish. |
I don’t think so. I’ve never had someone struggle in a marriage due to physical disabilities brought into the union. Obviously things can happen as life goes on. But mental illness has absolutely wrecked some marriages I’ve known. It’s just not the same thing to experience in a relationship with someone. |
Prenups are great for all parties because you have discussions about finances and expectations, and have a contract so if you do divorce, there's no fighting in court. You can also have a pre-nup that specifies you get pre-marital assets, which is worth negotiating for. Also a great indicator of a man's character. If his attitude is "the money is all mine and I want things in my favor", you know he's not a great partner. If his attitude is that he wants to make sure you're protected (especially if you'll be staying home with kids), that's good character. Again, it's like a business. If 2 people started a business and one had more finances to invest while the other had other assets to invest (such as time, expertise, etc) you'd have multiple in-depth discussions and signed contracts about your roles, dividing profits, what happens if you dissolve the business, etc. Marriage is no different. |
I doubt advice is about material engineers marrying only material engineers and astronauts only marry astronauts but being intellectually compatible to understand and support each other's struggles. |
Live with them for a year, go together through bill payments, cleaning, travel, infections, family gatherings, friend meet ups, company party, pet throwing up, etc to really understand if you two can handle life together or not. I know statistics say otherwise but cohabitation in today's world is a must.
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I don't tell my adult kids what to do but if I did I'd tell both my son and my daughter to make sure you are sexually compatible before you marry someone and under no circumstances marry a Trump voter.
Luckily they both already knew both. |
Have your own career/income. Always
Same thing my parents taught us. The man is not a plan. |
Emotional maturity is by far the most important. Far too many men struggle in this area IMHO. Especially with bad temper/frustration tolerance.
And I agree with nearly everything else posted as well. |
Don't let your babies grow up to be cowboys. Because they'll never stay home and they're always alone, even with someone they love. |
I watch television with my daughter (Gilmore Girls, Never Have I ever, etc), and we talk about what we do and don’t like about the protagonists various boyfriends, what makes them compatible or not, what behavior is creepy vs romantic, etc.
It’s a good way to talk about that stuff without it feeling super personal or like meddling. |
Very simple one. Marry a man who loves you much more than you love him. |
Unless he is a narcissistic POS, psychopath, rapist, beater, drunk, druggie, absent, you know? |
Marry a nerd |
Then this morphs into, “Wait until you have some financial stability,” and the goalposts keep moving. Then you end up spending $100,000 on IVF and still can’t get pregnant. There’s a reason that no women until the last 60 years of recorded history waited until their 30s to get in a relationship and start a family, and it’s not just the patriarchy. |
This tbh. Don't overinvest in education and career so much that you aren't dating to marry until your 30s or 40s. You just need something to fall back on if worst comes to worst, not making it your whole lifestyle... If you do, men of value will just pick the young college grad with no fertility concerns / debt / therapy baggage, and there will be no getting those misspent years of your youth back. Those years of your life are priceless - invest them well. Have your education wrapped up by 24 at the latest, but preferably sooner. That gives you just a few years to find a really good man before your options are limited to the bums already warned about ITT. |