Anonymous wrote:When my DC is dating someone I ask (and hopefully it is natural to do so?) - what do the parents do? And Are they still together? If I’m asking I guess it does matter to me. I’d prefer if the parents were still married, as I think it speaks to the values with which a person was raised (and I’m saying this dully aware of the hardships that I know many family and friends have had to resolve or overcome in order to stay in their marriages)
Anonymous wrote:My in laws felt like this when I was dating my now husband. 20 years on and they are still as ill-suited and irritable with each other as ever and we’re very happy. [/quote
+1
I am the daughter of a college-educated single mom. Apparently, some family members questioned my husband’s choice of wife.
His parents cannot stand each other and that has been the case as long as I have known him (20 years).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the child of an alcoholic but I am not neither an alcoholic nor addicted to any other substances. I am a child of divorce but have been with the same person for over 20 years. My spouse comes from a ‘intact’ family pushing 50 years married and is emotionally stunted and verbally abusive. Never judge a book by its cover.
You picked him so you might have picked up issues from your parents' disfunction.
Way to spin that, wow!
Anonymous wrote:I felt that way when I starting dating with an eye towards a marriage and family. I never would have said it out loud though
Anonymous wrote:My parents stayed together yet somehow I still managed to get divorced myself. Doesn't seem to correlate.....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the child of an alcoholic but I am not neither an alcoholic nor addicted to any other substances. I am a child of divorce but have been with the same person for over 20 years. My spouse comes from a ‘intact’ family pushing 50 years married and is emotionally stunted and verbally abusive. Never judge a book by its cover.
You picked him so you might have picked up issues from your parents' disfunction.
Anonymous wrote:I am the child of an alcoholic but I am not neither an alcoholic nor addicted to any other substances. I am a child of divorce but have been with the same person for over 20 years. My spouse comes from a ‘intact’ family pushing 50 years married and is emotionally stunted and verbally abusive. Never judge a book by its cover.
Anonymous wrote:Yea there is fallacy in his logic. He is using no divorce as a crutch to avoid the risk of a broken marriage.
The truth is that we are all vulnerable to the risk of being hurt in marriage.
There are plenty of broken people from married homes, and whole people from divorced homes. And vice versa.
I think this is a stupid rule tbh. But to each their own.