Anonymous wrote:Know mental disorder symptoms and check for them.
Anonymous wrote:The reality is you are signing a lifelong legal contract with someone and you need to evaluate them separate from the love and more as a business partner who you are legally bound to.
Get a pre-nup. If you can’t have difficult talks about finances, domestic work, and expectations, it’s not the person to marry.
You can always come home and mom will take care of you. I don’t care how old, with how many kids, or how badly you messed up, my door is always open and I will help fix it.
Anonymous wrote:My mom told me to only marry a man whose job I could understand. My dad is a PhD scientist.
There was a kernel of wisdom in that.
1. You can’t have 100% of what you want or need 100% of the time. Pick what’s really important to you and think about how you are going to deal with the rest.
2. A man is not a plan.
3. Your relationship with your husband is its own living thing and if you want it to bear fruit, it should be nourished and developed independently of what else is going on in your life. If you want to always have a partner, you always have to be one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't. There isn't a damned thing you'll have, with certainty, in a marriage that you can't have in a relationship that isn't government-bound. It's a hell of a lot easier to leave a partner than it is to leave a spouse. Have you own affairs in order such that the "financial incentives" of marriage aren't a draw. No health insurance, cheaper rates, etc. are worth what you may end up going through as a person who needs to ask the government for permission to leave "your person" if/when they stop acting like they're actually your person.
So just don't. Have a life that belongs to you. Get an education, get a job you find meaningful and as satisfying as a job can be, have friends, travel, engage in relationships when you want to and LEAVE THEM when they're no longer aligned with your goals. Never let anyone mistreat you twice (and most people should get cut off after the first round; forgive them and LET THEM GO).
And take your birth control. Never trust that a man is going to have/use a condom.
Uh, if you have children, this is a good thing.
Don't settle for less than 8
Anonymous wrote:Don't. There isn't a damned thing you'll have, with certainty, in a marriage that you can't have in a relationship that isn't government-bound. It's a hell of a lot easier to leave a partner than it is to leave a spouse. Have you own affairs in order such that the "financial incentives" of marriage aren't a draw. No health insurance, cheaper rates, etc. are worth what you may end up going through as a person who needs to ask the government for permission to leave "your person" if/when they stop acting like they're actually your person.
So just don't. Have a life that belongs to you. Get an education, get a job you find meaningful and as satisfying as a job can be, have friends, travel, engage in relationships when you want to and LEAVE THEM when they're no longer aligned with your goals. Never let anyone mistreat you twice (and most people should get cut off after the first round; forgive them and LET THEM GO).
And take your birth control. Never trust that a man is going to have/use a condom.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t get a tattoo if you want a good man to marry you.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t give up your career.
Work on maintaining sexual chemistry
Be patient but don’t compromise your standards
Save money
Don’t just get married because your “clock is ticking” or friends are all getting married.
Don’t ignore red flags
Anonymous wrote:Watch how they interact with babies/kids, old people, and animals. That will tell you what you need to know.