Anonymous wrote:Ladies: if you are interested in getting married, you need to be well aware of the fact that you are probably most attractive sometime in your mid- to late-twenties. This means that your mid- to late-twenties are the years in which you are most likely to attract the highest quality man you can get. And while maximizing your attractiveness is key, it all counts for nothing if you aren't single when the right guy comes along, or if you aren't putting yourself out there because you are involved with someone who is only half-committed to you. So in addition to looking your best, you need to make sure you aren't spending time in dead-end relationships.
Time and time again I see or hear about girls who allow a guy to date them for three or four years in their twenties without proposing. This blows my mind. I understand that these girls are holding out in the hope of eventually getting a proposal, but they don't give enough consideration to the possibility that they'll be strung along for another two or three years, only to have him decide that he wants someone else - or worse yet, someone younger. Combine this with a girl's reduced odds of finding someone (let alone someone better) once she begins to age and things begin to fall into perspective; it seems crazy to consider dating someone for more than a year without a very strong confidence about the direction in which the relationship is heading.
Ladies: don't give a guy your most eligible years with nothing to show for it. This is bullshit. If you ultimately want to get married and your current relationship isn't constantly growing stronger (i.e. approaching something permanent), then you need to start asking questions. And if you aren't getting satisfactory answers, it is time to look elsewhere. The clock is ticking.
Furthermore, your time is your responsibility - not his. For better or worse, men will not make commitments that aren't required of them. If he isn't taking things to the next level when you think it is appropriate, break up with him. You can do this nicely, and you should explain your reasoning clearly, but you should still break up with him. More easily said than done? Probably. But it is the best move nonetheless. If he really wants you, he will try to get you back; but if he doesn't, remember: during your most eligible years, you are better off being back on the market than tied up in a dead-end relationship.
This is amongst the most chauvinist, sexist, arrogant, and ignorant post I have ever come across on this forum. OP clearly has no authoritative experience understanding love, relationships, and seem to assume that marriage-however defined- is appropriate for everyone and all relationships. This is amateurish and monolithic at best.
I have highlighted the most appalling aspects of this that jump out at me, but for the most part I can only advise OP to continue learning, travel more, embrace other cultures and ethnicities, and perhaps that can help with a more robust view of life. Consider the following:
1. There is no direct positive relationship between AGE and ATTRACTIVENESS. Attraction is firstly a scientific event
http://dvd.netflix.com/Movie/The_Science_of_Sex_Appeal/70128594
2. The sense of sight is culturally-dependent
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xl7cgh_horizon-do-you-see-what-i-see-part-1-4_shortfilms Worth watching the part with the Himba Tribe, which has been an eye opener (pun intended) to the Western world as seen here
http://6thfloor.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/04/its-not-easy-seeing-green/.
3. In the Western world (I assume the perspective from which you are writing), women don't "...give their years to men..." Women date freely and make MUTUAL commitments based on what a relationship provides.
4. There are different definitions of marriage, and 'legal marriage' is not necessarily the happy ending for all relationships, or appropriate for everyone, as stated before.
5. Finally, it is perspectives like these which the OP expresses which are responsible for many break-ups and divorces and child support drama. NEVER get involved with someone on the condition that it MUST lead to 'legal marriage'. sizing up people and relationships for marriage potential is the sure road to perdition.