Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have read that over 30% of women regret walking down the aisle with their fiance. Please do not be one of them.
+1. A very high percentage of divorces occur simply as the result of poor decisions where one or both parties had the warning signs and chose to move forward anyway.
Anonymous wrote:OP, take the "advice" here with a grain of salt. You are reading the grievances of people for whom things did not work out. There are plenty of people who were anxious before a wedding and were happily married. Try to figure out if your lack of excitement is due to being stressed, or if you really just aren't looking forward to being with this guy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am happily married for 20 years now. I was engaged to my now-DH twice. The first time, we planned a fairly big wedding. Whole thing just seemed like a burden. We broke up for half a year but eventually got back together. When we decided a year after that to get married, we practically eloped - a very small wedding, planned in about 2 months, with just family.
In my experience, too many people plan weddings and not marriages. If you put too much stock into the wedding part, you are bound to be disappointed by the letdown as you head into marriage. But if you are not looking forward to spending your life with your fiance, you shouldn't marry him now.
It might also help to meet with a counselor a few times, if you are so inclined, just to clarify things for yourself.
Good luck.
I think that has been said before, but regardless, that is dead on.
Anonymous wrote:I am happily married for 20 years now. I was engaged to my now-DH twice. The first time, we planned a fairly big wedding. Whole thing just seemed like a burden. We broke up for half a year but eventually got back together. When we decided a year after that to get married, we practically eloped - a very small wedding, planned in about 2 months, with just family.
In my experience, too many people plan weddings and not marriages. If you put too much stock into the wedding part, you are bound to be disappointed by the letdown as you head into marriage. But if you are not looking forward to spending your life with your fiance, you shouldn't marry him now.
It might also help to meet with a counselor a few times, if you are so inclined, just to clarify things for yourself.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:I don't feel excited about marrying my fiance. The whole wedding planning situation makes me stressed out and anxious. I don't daydream about my dress or being his mrs. Is this okay?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are plenty of people who were anxious before a wedding and were happily married.
Why aren't they posting, then? This isn't a board called "Grievances of People for Whom Things Did Not Work Out." This is for all relationships, and both happily and unhappily married people read this.
I asked about OP's thoughts on the long future, but I'll also add, how do your friends and family feel about your relationship? If they have concerns, too, I would add them to your things to think about.
Because this is a place where unhappy, negative people tend to post. That's true of most Internet forums, really. People who are content and successful in their own lives don't usually spend of bunch of time in places like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are plenty of people who were anxious before a wedding and were happily married.
Why aren't they posting, then? This isn't a board called "Grievances of People for Whom Things Did Not Work Out." This is for all relationships, and both happily and unhappily married people read this.
I asked about OP's thoughts on the long future, but I'll also add, how do your friends and family feel about your relationship? If they have concerns, too, I would add them to your things to think about.
Anonymous wrote:There are plenty of people who were anxious before a wedding and were happily married.