Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother told me to marry someone like my father! My daughters are very young but so far I’d be telling them the same thing!
So what are they like?
Anonymous wrote:My mother told me to marry someone like my father! My daughters are very young but so far I’d be telling them the same thing!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My advice would be to focus first on yourself. Figure out who you are and what you want out of life. Be realistic about what marriage entails. Be open to experiences and people that may not immediately check off every box. Let go of the fairy tales. Don't be so hyper-focused on finding the right man. Work on yourself first. That way, you'll increase the chances of making the right decision when you meet the guy who could be the right one when the time comes.
More often than not (obvious red flags aside), we find ourselves having to decide whether to marry someone based upon foresight. You THINK he's this or that based on what you've seen so far, but there's no way to truly know how he will be 5, 10, or 20 years down the road. You just hope the person you picked changes in a way that's compatible with how you will change as you go through life together. There is truly no way to ensure you've married wisely until you reach a point in life where you can look back and make a determination based upon what was right for YOU.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they had a f*cked up childhood--a parent was an alcoholic or a serial cheater...RUN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
NO matter how much they swear they won't turn out that way...wait 20 years and tell me what happens.
My husband's mother was an alcoholic and he's an amazing person and father and I wouldn't trade him for anything. You are wrong about this.
My husband's mother was an alcoholic and he's a crappy person -- liar, cheat, problem drinker and has the same mental illness she did which also affects my kids. I wish I'd never met him; he has caused my and our kids so much pain.
So, YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Understand that every trait, including the ones you admire, can have a "negative" side. I admired my now DH's passion for justice but didn't realize that meant he has a very strong sense of right/wrong in all areas (low tolerance threshold). DH liked that I had a more relaxed personality, but now gets frustrated that I don't care as much about a neat house.
The adage that ‘opposites attract’ is true, especially when you're young. The problem is that as the marriage progresses, the differences become annoyances and each of you try to get their partner to be more like them.
Anonymous wrote:Most of the posters here have been women I suppose. I am a father of two girls and here is my advice to them:
1) Marry someone with a value system and know what that value system represents. Our value system is centered around our church so I'm encouraging my daughters to marry within our faith.
2) Marry someone with a purpose. Do you want to go on that journey with them and is it compatible with your purpose in life?
3) Meet your spouse's family and spend significant time with them to see how they treat each other, resolve conflict, what they laugh about, etc.
Anonymous wrote:My advice would be to focus first on yourself. Figure out who you are and what you want out of life. Be realistic about what marriage entails. Be open to experiences and people that may not immediately check off every box. Let go of the fairy tales. Don't be so hyper-focused on finding the right man. Work on yourself first. That way, you'll increase the chances of making the right decision when you meet the guy who could be the right one when the time comes.
More often than not (obvious red flags aside), we find ourselves having to decide whether to marry someone based upon foresight. You THINK he's this or that based on what you've seen so far, but there's no way to truly know how he will be 5, 10, or 20 years down the road. You just hope the person you picked changes in a way that's compatible with how you will change as you go through life together. There is truly no way to ensure you've married wisely until you reach a point in life where you can look back and make a determination based upon what was right for YOU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am early 40s. Married 10 years and recently divorced.
My advice to young women is seriously this:
Do not get married.
There is literally no advantage nowadays to marriage for women. None whatsoever. The only exception is if you want to be a mother and a husband is willing to support you as a SAHM for the marriage.
Exhibit A on the effects of the wrong choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wait until you are older before getting married. have your education, have a job and a way to support yourself
I married older (late 30s) and it’s one of the bigger challenges in our marriage that we’re each so used to being independent. Maybe that’s just us but I don’t think marrying older is the answer necessarily. Plus while we were able to support ourselves independently before we built a life together that requires both incomes.
Anonymous wrote:Understand that every trait, including the ones you admire, can have a "negative" side. I admired my now DH's passion for justice but didn't realize that meant he has a very strong sense of right/wrong in all areas (low tolerance threshold). DH liked that I had a more relaxed personality, but now gets frustrated that I don't care as much about a neat house.