Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I got engaged right after college, and married at age 25. People definitely thought we were weird, and DHs mom told people AT OUR WEDDING that we were too young to get married.
Fifteen years later we are happily married and are proud we got married “young”. We’ve had friends who were single at our wedding get married and divorced already. I really don’t think being young is intrinsically bad.
Time to stop being so smug bc fifteen years is nothing. I say this as someone who got married a few years earlier than you. It’s been 16 years and we haven’t hit the real tough parts yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got engaged at 22, married at 23, and had kids at 26 and 28. I also went through law school while I had my first. I’m very happy with my choices and believe that people are misinterpreting the statistic about people getting divorced when they marry early. It’s more likely an issue of correlation and not causation- people in the US who “marry young” may be less educated, have less financial resources, etc.
OP’s “niece” works in tech and most likely will not have financial stressors impacting her marriage.
In any event I am from a highly educated immigrant background where this is the norm- many of my peers who are doctors, lawyers, PHDs, had a similar trajectory and stayed with their spouses for the long haul, because that is our culture. The family unit is more important than the individual. It is what it is, not better or worse than white American culture.
The "niece" that works in tech has probably got her job a month ago. No telling where it goes.
Anonymous wrote:I got engaged at 22, married at 23, and had kids at 26 and 28. I also went through law school while I had my first. I’m very happy with my choices and believe that people are misinterpreting the statistic about people getting divorced when they marry early. It’s more likely an issue of correlation and not causation- people in the US who “marry young” may be less educated, have less financial resources, etc.
OP’s “niece” works in tech and most likely will not have financial stressors impacting her marriage.
In any event I am from a highly educated immigrant background where this is the norm- many of my peers who are doctors, lawyers, PHDs, had a similar trajectory and stayed with their spouses for the long haul, because that is our culture. The family unit is more important than the individual. It is what it is, not better or worse than white American culture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I got married at 23 and had my first at 25, while in grad school.
A few of my friends married at that age as well, so it didn't seem strange until I came to the DC area and kept getting strange looks from people, and then realized that other mothers at the preschool were not in the same age bracket. I still made friends, though.
It's all about your outlook and being adaptable.
And that was probably a couple decades ago...