Anonymous wrote:I married a man from India. He is very family oriented and a good provider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could just tell that the man I married would be an excellent father -- sensitive, intelligent and not really into hanging out with the guys. I was right. He's been a great dad to our three kids. On the flip side, he's not as Alpha as I'd sometimes like, but you can't have everything.
what do you mean by not as "Alpha"?
Anonymous wrote:I could just tell that the man I married would be an excellent father -- sensitive, intelligent and not really into hanging out with the guys. I was right. He's been a great dad to our three kids. On the flip side, he's not as Alpha as I'd sometimes like, but you can't have everything.
Anonymous wrote:You attract people like yourself to you.
Anonymous wrote:I'm very family oriented now. My wife and I started making out at a kegger. I was a graduate student who liked to drink a lot. I'm not sure I gave many indications of being family oriented. Certainly, I was not eager to have kids when we met.
But, as a quick and dirty guide, I'd say pay attention to how he treats people weaker than him - both physically and socially. This should give you some indication of how considerate he will be to children when they come along.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"equally yoked" - what does this mean?
The phrase “unequally yoked” comes from 2 Corinthians 6:14 in the King James Version: “Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? and what communion hath light with darkness?” The New American Standard Version is a little more forthright: “Do not be bound together with unbelievers; for what partnership have righteousness and lawlessness, or what fellowship has light with darkness?”
A yoke is a wooden bar that joins two animals to each other and to the burden they pull, and forces them to work together, simultaneously. It is a laboring harness for oxen, mule, etc. An “unequally yoked” team has two animals that are not necessarily equal in their strength/stamina/etc. A combindation of factors that would impact the effectiveness of the work to be done. For example, a weaker or shorter ox would walk slower than the taller, stronger one, causing the load to go around in circles. When oxen are unequally yoked, they cannot perform the task set before them. Instead of working together, they are at odds with one another.
The scripture of not being unequally yoked is not specific to marriage, but the implied principle is the same. In referring to marriages of believers (in Christ), this scripture emphasizes the importance of working together as one, submitting to each other in love, respecting as individuals. You know the 3-legged race, where they tie two legs together and you both have to walk fast to get to the finish line? The teams that win work together and dont fall, they get in rhythm. It is kind of like that.
It helps for two to be similar in capacity so that they can work together - because there is always work to be done!
Anonymous wrote:At work
Anonymous wrote:"equally yoked" - what does this mean?

Anonymous wrote:
Met him at Starbucks. We created a beautiful family but I found that as I advanced in my career, he pulled away from the idea of family. He left all household responsibilities to me, including all of the child care, when he had been an incredibly involved father starting out. Night and day, once the resentment set in. Sadly, we divorced when the kids were still very, very young (toddlers). I still don't understand how he went from a family-focused partner to a single guy with very little interest in his much-wanted children.
Being equally yolked is vastly more important than I imagined. I thought shared values was enough. Nope.
Anonymous wrote:You attract people like yourself to you.
Anonymous wrote:Mine comes from a large family that still does everything together as much as possible.
(Right now he is making a birthday card to send to Sunny side up show for his son's 1st birthday).