| Yes. My husband and I are different races, so if I was his race he probably would have still married me. |
Once I told him by nationality, he realized what my "race" was; and it isn't Asian.
The answer is still YES. |
| No and I would not have married someone who was not the same race as I. Also, neither of us would have married someone who didn't have the same socio-economic background. |
Nah. The husband is probably higher status than the wife like it usually is. I married a white, wealthy/trust funded, Ivy educated guy and while I'm similarly educated, I'm Asian and from a middle class background. DH dated all races before me so yes, he would have married me if I were white, black or purple and I wouldn't have married someone who had hang ups about race in the first place. |
| My spouse probably wouldn't have married me if I was a different race and vice-versa. |
I think the socio-economic status one might be a more interesting discussion. why do you say this? I'm curious because I never really thought much about it, but it seems that most of the men I dated (and the man I married) have been of similar backgrounds. Not that I didn't mix and mingle with people of higher and lower status than my own family, I just tended to find myself dating people of similar status. Even shared the same types of jobs - teachers/educators, many of them. It certainly wasn't a conscious choice. |
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| I don't think my DH would have consciously ruled out women based on race, nor would I. But like a lot of people, we both ended up dating and marrying within our race. I'm trying to remember if there are any exceptions to that, but I can't think of any. |
diplomatic
When you're young and in the throes of the insanity of love, you tend to believe that there really is "happily everaftering." Once married, you soon realize that there is a lot more to a marriage than love and in my experience, I think it was easier because we did have the same background. If one of us had been lower socio-economic and the other of a much higher socio-economic background, it would have created some big problems. My father was an Air Force general and his father was a Foreign Service officer, as was my DH. Being the daughter of a general gave me the knowledge of what was expected in my role as the wife of someone representing the US. For some people, this might not have made a bit of difference, but to both of us, it was important. Like it or not, most women have more duties re entertaining, children, taking care of a house and learning from my mother was an education that one had to learn by watching and doing these things. |
DH has a different race and didn't exclusively date one race so I would say yes. At the same time I think I wouldn't be the same me if I were a different race. One thing though is I can't be best friends with someone that would never consider dating someone of my same racial background. It just seems false to me to say we are really cool and all but I would never want my son to date your daughter, I don't think you, your children, your extended family are particularly cute because I only like x features not found in your gene pool ... and those are just the things the person will admit to in a more PC way than I stated it. |
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I agree. It's so stupid. There is NO way you'd be the same person. If I were AA, my outlook, I'm sure, would be quite different. And being raised in a different culture (Korean, for example) shapes who you are. dumb |
Ditto. I would find marrying someone either much wealthier or much poorer more difficult even than the race thing. |
You've never even thought about this?? I have had friends much wealthier who couldn't fathom not being able to afford something. They spent their college summers studying art in Florence; I spent each and every summer working full time. I'm much more ambitious and competitive because I was never guaranteed anything financially. And on the other end, my truly poor friends think my lifestyle is frivolous. I don't want to spend my time justifying my lifestyle. |
| Race is a consideration, but not a deal breaker. The only dealbreaker I had with men was that he absolutely positively could not be of average intelligence or lower. I wouldn't go on a second date with a man who wasn't brilliant. |