Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think marrying younger is better than marrying older, but that a successful young marriage (even more than any marriage) requires profound devotion to the institution as well as the intended spouse. Marriage is tough. It requires huge self-sacrifice. Kids, financial issues, employment demands, possible relocation for more education or work all add additional stress. Maturity and life experience can make these stresses easier to handle, but not all experience is helpful. Some experience can reinforce attitudes and habits that are antithetical to a successful marriage. Shared religious/social values certainly make a marriage more likely to succeed, but they are not guarantees. One of the strengths of a younger marriage is that the partners come over time to have shared a larger portion of their time together, as compared to people who got together later.
Yes—notoriously, those of us who marry later come to spend a smaller and smaller portion of our total lifetimes with our spouses as the years go by.
tf?? lol
+++ From a person who has been married almost 29 years (married at 22)... I sometimes wish marriage had an expiration date. Maybe my DH would be a little more motivated if he had to renew this contract.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think marrying younger is better than marrying older, but that a successful young marriage (even more than any marriage) requires profound devotion to the institution as well as the intended spouse. Marriage is tough. It requires huge self-sacrifice. Kids, financial issues, employment demands, possible relocation for more education or work all add additional stress. Maturity and life experience can make these stresses easier to handle, but not all experience is helpful. Some experience can reinforce attitudes and habits that are antithetical to a successful marriage. Shared religious/social values certainly make a marriage more likely to succeed, but they are not guarantees. One of the strengths of a younger marriage is that the partners come over time to have shared a larger portion of their time together, as compared to people who got together later.
Yes—notoriously, those of us who marry later come to spend a smaller and smaller portion of our total lifetimes with our spouses as the years go by.
tf?? lol
Anonymous wrote:If you are religious, would you want/expect/encourage your adult child get married right after undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:I think marrying younger is better than marrying older, but that a successful young marriage (even more than any marriage) requires profound devotion to the institution as well as the intended spouse. Marriage is tough. It requires huge self-sacrifice. Kids, financial issues, employment demands, possible relocation for more education or work all add additional stress. Maturity and life experience can make these stresses easier to handle, but not all experience is helpful. Some experience can reinforce attitudes and habits that are antithetical to a successful marriage. Shared religious/social values certainly make a marriage more likely to succeed, but they are not guarantees. One of the strengths of a younger marriage is that the partners come over time to have shared a larger portion of their time together, as compared to people who got together later.