Anonymous wrote:While I think it is completely fine to get married after 30, I wouldn’t dissuade people from getting married before 30, either. Honestly, if you want multiple kids, I think it can work out well to date seriously in your mid 20s and get married late 20s-early 30s. If you wait until your 30s to start looking for a spouse it shortens your timeline and puts a lot more pressure on finding someone quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a great trend, if true. Once our kids graduate college, their chances of meeting someone organically go down, and it becomes a dating app world.
Young people don't even know who they are before 30. How could you make an intelligent commitment like marriage at that age? If it works it's luck, because 20's are for being free and mindfully single.
Anonymous wrote:We are not rich but our children are in some affluent social circles due to private high school and selective colleges. So many of their 22 to 24 year old peers are getting married and engaged. Ivy Leaguers, even kids in law school and medical school, several private high school kids engaged to classmates! It seems like a half dozen just got engaged in the last week or two - kids who just graduated from college in the spring! Young love is beautiful to see but I’m not sure if I’m seeing it just because our kids are this age or if it is actually a broader trend bucking the whole wait until you’re around 30 to settle down young professional thing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’ll be the first to get divorced, too. This has been my experience with everyone I know who married right after college.
I've seen the EXACT OPPOSITE. I'm 52 and everyone I know that married young is still going strong. The ones that 'settled' in their 30s and immediately popped out kids with almost no time as married couple first--imploded midlife.
Love marriages vs "My time is running out, this one will do'.
Anonymous wrote:Handy thought about this, but when I list people from my single days, my friends in the 2000s/early 2010 all married in order of richness. The richest people got married the earliest. I think having a background of wealth makes it easier to settle down because you can afford certain things earlier and don’t have as much pressure to establish your career as people with less.
Anonymous wrote:
Young people don't even know who they are before 30. How could you make an intelligent commitment like marriage at that age? If it works it's luck, because 20's are for being free and mindfully single.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a great trend, if true. Once our kids graduate college, their chances of meeting someone organically go down, and it becomes a dating app world.
Young people don't even know who they are before 30. How could you make an intelligent commitment like marriage at that age? If it works it's luck, because 20's are for being free and mindfully single.
That's scary. Barring some sort of disability, I would feel like I had failed as a parent if my (adult) child didn't have a sense of self in their 20s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a great trend, if true. Once our kids graduate college, their chances of meeting someone organically go down, and it becomes a dating app world.
Young people don't even know who they are before 30. How could you make an intelligent commitment like marriage at that age? If it works it's luck, because 20's are for being free and mindfully single.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they get engaged during the year after graduation, they're likely 23. With a 1.5 year engagement to save up for wedding costs, that has them getting married around age 25. That's on the younger side, but not super young.
The only kids I know who got married *right* out of college had super strict, religious parents and the kids were getting married to avoid moving home with the strict parents.
I’ve seen engagement photos on campus or on a trip soon after graduation. It seems ambitious rich kids are eager to check the marriage box and “playing the field” in their 20s seems increasingly gross, immature and pointless to them. Hookup culture is passé.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a great trend, if true. Once our kids graduate college, their chances of meeting someone organically go down, and it becomes a dating app world.
Young people don't even know who they are before 30. How could you make an intelligent commitment like marriage at that age? If it works it's luck, because 20's are for being free and mindfully single.
We are all constantly growing and learning. Getting to do even more of that growing and learning with my life partner has been a wonderful blessing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is a great trend, if true. Once our kids graduate college, their chances of meeting someone organically go down, and it becomes a dating app world.
Young people don't even know who they are before 30. How could you make an intelligent commitment like marriage at that age? If it works it's luck, because 20's are for being free and mindfully single.