"Extreme"-really? My mother:You are nothing without a husband! What's wrong with you? Are you a lesbian?Anonymous wrote:
Or maybe she is feeling extreme pressure from her family (and extended family) to marry, regardless of what her personal desires are. In a matchmaking process candidates are vetted down to a handful of folks to choose from and there is A LOT of pressure to choose one of these handful. I don't think most appreciate that there is little "choice" in this process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as she’s on board. Honestly, dating is hard for beautiful, educated and ambitious women. It’s hard finding a man that would be considered your equal. There are just not enough of these high quality men around. I hope that improves with the new generations.
This. It seems like the daughter is okay with it and he's a good guy I don't see a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Is the question why would this girl be so willing to marry this particular groom when she is well educated, financially emancipated and did date on her own across race and profession?
My guess is because she is marrying a well-matched person in all ways who wants the same things as her and both liked each other as marriage partners. There is always some physical attraction and in most cases the arranged marriages couples find that the process of arranged marriage yields them far superior mates than what they could find by themselves in the dating world. Mom, dad, matchmaker will do a better job than Tinder in a heartbeat. .
Also, maybe she does not have emotional baggage because she is not a floor model who has been frequently test driven by the Tom's Dick's in a Hurry?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to my Indian colleague, it’s not all as good as it seems on surface, match making and arranged marriages has its own pros and cons. He says not even educated Indians in India wants to go through it.
It’s not really arranged.
It’s like “here is a list of people that fit a certain criteria”. Who on this list do you vibe with.
+1. A company like Tinder has vested interest in taking your $ and keeping you single. A parent doing the same thing has vested interest in their baby's happiness.Anonymous wrote:It makes sense to me. The guy is from the same culture and has the same education. Better than finding a husband through Tinder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it more about finding right religion, cast, ethnicity, social status, looks, income etc or the person? It’s fine if there is no rush to get engaged or marry immediately. If you date for a year and then decide, it may work better but most parents are against it because then things tend to go sour.
Two adults who have gone through all the work to make it to medical school and have a good work ethic, probably have good examples of functional families in their own lives, are educated and high SES, have vetted each other after dating others, decide to marry with the blessings of two families and are being judged by a group of dysfunctional people whose national divorce rate is 50%?
ok. sure.
Anonymous wrote:Is it more about finding right religion, cast, ethnicity, social status, looks, income etc or the person? It’s fine if there is no rush to get engaged or marry immediately. If you date for a year and then decide, it may work better but most parents are against it because then things tend to go sour.
Anonymous wrote:Is it more about finding right religion, cast, ethnicity, social status, looks, income etc or the person? It’s fine if there is no rush to get engaged or marry immediately. If you date for a year and then decide, it may work better but most parents are against it because then things tend to go sour.
Anonymous wrote:As long as she’s on board. Honestly, dating is hard for beautiful, educated and ambitious women. It’s hard finding a man that would be considered your equal. There are just not enough of these high quality men around. I hope that improves with the new generations.
Anonymous wrote:Is it more about finding right religion, cast, ethnicity, social status, looks, income etc or the person? It’s fine if there is no rush to get engaged or marry immediately. If you date for a year and then decide, it may work better but most parents are against it because then things tend to go sour.
Anonymous wrote:According to my Indian colleague, it’s not all as good as it seems on surface, match making and arranged marriages has its own pros and cons. He says not even educated Indians in India wants to go through it.