Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is nuts. Really.
We didn't meet in college.
He's not nuts at all. Lots of people meet their spouses in college or later on through friends that they made in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is nuts. Really.
We didn't meet in college.
He's not nuts at all. Lots of people meet their spouses in college or later on through friends that they made in college.
But even more people do not meet their spouses at college. I wouldn't choose a college to go spouse hunting. Most 18-22 year old students aren't anywhere near getting married.
I read somewhere that most people ultimately end up marrying someone who they met through a high school/college contact. This does not necessarily mean that they started dating their spouse in college and married, shortly thereafter, but could be at 28 married started dating someone who is a friend of a college friend. Most everyone I know ended up marrying someone who they made from a connection to someone they knew in their late teens/early twenties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is nuts. Really.
We didn't meet in college.
He's not nuts at all. Lots of people meet their spouses in college or later on through friends that they made in college.
But even more people do not meet their spouses at college. I wouldn't choose a college to go spouse hunting. Most 18-22 year old students aren't anywhere near getting married.
I read somewhere that most people ultimately end up marrying someone who they met through a high school/college contact. This does not necessarily mean that they started dating their spouse in college and married, shortly thereafter, but could be at 28 married started dating someone who is a friend of a college friend. Most everyone I know ended up marrying someone who they made from a connection to someone they knew in their late teens/early twenties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is nuts. Really.
We didn't meet in college.
He's not nuts at all. Lots of people meet their spouses in college or later on through friends that they made in college.
But even more people do not meet their spouses at college. I wouldn't choose a college to go spouse hunting. Most 18-22 year old students aren't anywhere near getting married.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is nuts. Really.
We didn't meet in college.
He's not nuts at all. Lots of people meet their spouses in college or later on through friends that they made in college.
Anonymous wrote:Overall, I don't think that most people meet their spouse during college, but I think it's a little more common at big state schools. Less common at elite schools where many people are looking at grad school, etc. after graduation. People tend to disperse more after elite schools rather than stay within the same region.
Anonymous wrote:I have a DS going to college next year, and yes, I'm slightly biased towards 50/50 environments. (I'd also like him to attend a school that is diverse and reflects the population of the US.) While I didn't meet my spouse in college the people that I did meet influenced my life for years, even to this day.
As for DS (who has declared himself cis-gendered) he likes schools that have more females than males, which is most of them. While he is a great kid, at least so far, I'd much rather him not be in an environment where he is sought after as a straight male. And while people may skewer that comment, I definitely think it could happen at some of the school that we've seen in the past year.
So, while I'd never put it in the terms that OP's DH did, I do think that you lose something when colleges cease to reflect the make-up of the general population.
Anonymous wrote:DH seems to believe that a factor to be considered in weighing colleges is the meeting-your-future spouse factor. Thus he is dissuading our DC from looking at single sex schools, is focused on male-female ratios at the coed schools, is pushing schools with a heavy Greek life, checks that our religion is well represented on prospective campuses, is even showing us polls of most attractive student bodies!
Yes, it so happens that we met in college, but he was a grad ad student so not sure that even "counts."
I am curious how many of you out there met your now spouse in college.
I guess I am also curious whether there are any other parents out there who tell their kids that odds are they'll meet their future spouse in college so weigh that factor accordingly. Or is my DH the only nut out there.
Anonymous wrote:You DH is living in the 70s or before. You may "meet" them at college but not get together for years later. Please let him now that the people who do meet in college, often live together for up to a decade while doing masters/PhDs and building a career, and buy a house. Marriage is for kids or when the couple decides they are stable in their career or finances. I feel a little bad for your daughter. There are way more important things like her major, career, and traveling, and getting to know herself as a person.
Anonymous wrote:Your DH is nuts. Really.
We didn't meet in college.