Anonymous wrote:We will be attending a wedding of a 22 year old couple and it feels like a train wreck. They just graduated from college a couple months ago. They are immature and the parents are religious so they were probably pressured. I feel bad that they won’t have a chance to grow up before making this commitment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:*than postponing
I think it is pretty different, actually. Postponing due to societal expectations assumes you do really want to marry. Marrying because of religious or family pressure or because you want to have sex assumes outside factors are having a disproportionate impact on that decision. Different motivations for wanting to get married. Presumably the couple that doesn't want to wait two years would also be able to say, screw it let's go to the courthouse and people would get over it
The other couple...he'll fire and brimstone, social shunning?
I agree. Someone close to me just married at 23 and 23. They were not allowed to "date", and this was the only way to be together. But they were never "together" before they got engaged so they can't know each other that well. Once engaged, they were allowed to "court" and spend time alone for the first time, but only in public, and only for 6 months. The girl's father would only allow a 6 month engagement since there would be too much temptation. If there had been any sex before marriage, she would be shunned for life.
Very very sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents married really young but built a fantastic life, uncles and aunts on both sides, married in late 30's or early 40's, no one did well, two divorced. Just anecdotes but formed my opinion that, being mature and being of mature age aren't the same.
Kind of irrelevant since OP specifically said they ate NOT mature and also marrying due to family pressure and religious expectations.
Based on her original post (and the fact that she posted about this in the first place) I doubt that OP is a reliable judge of maturity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents married really young but built a fantastic life, uncles and aunts on both sides, married in late 30's or early 40's, no one did well, two divorced. Just anecdotes but formed my opinion that, being mature and being of mature age aren't the same.
Kind of irrelevant since OP specifically said they ate NOT mature and also marrying due to family pressure and religious expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:*than postponing
I think it is pretty different, actually. Postponing due to societal expectations assumes you do really want to marry. Marrying because of religious or family pressure or because you want to have sex assumes outside factors are having a disproportionate impact on that decision. Different motivations for wanting to get married. Presumably the couple that doesn't want to wait two years would also be able to say, screw it let's go to the courthouse and people would get over it
The other couple...he'll fire and brimstone, social shunning?
Anonymous wrote:We will be attending a wedding of a 22 year old couple and it feels like a train wreck. They just graduated from college a couple months ago. They are immature and the parents are religious so they were probably pressured. I feel bad that they won’t have a chance to grow up before making this commitment.
Anonymous wrote:*than postponing
Anonymous wrote:Met my DH at 21, got engaged at 23, married at 24. Just celebrated our 32nd anniversary. It has not been a train wreck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP
Please do not attend the wedding if you are not happy for the couple.
I agree…but neither the parents or couple can ask why OP isn’t coming.
People are weird and maybe OP is local, so the inviting party may find it strange that OP doesn’t attend.
This works two ways.
No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP
Please do not attend the wedding if you are not happy for the couple.
I agree…but neither the parents or couple can ask why OP isn’t coming.
People are weird and maybe OP is local, so the inviting party may find it strange that OP doesn’t attend.
This works two ways.