Anonymous wrote:Well, do you want to move or not? Is the new place somewhere you would want to live? Or not?
Anonymous wrote:Met senior year, together for 3 years, lived together for last year and a half. He asked to move together and his parents too are enthusiastic about it. He did first two years of college there so knows town well and his parents live in bordering state so drivable.
Anonymous wrote:Well, do you want to move or not? Is the new place somewhere you would want to live? Or not?
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't move without being engaged, but I don't want a ring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did. DH and I were college friends who got together as he was getting ready to move away for a new job. We dated long distance for 2 years and then I moved to where he was without a ring. I got a job and chose to live with roommates instead of living with him. We dated another year before getting engaged and then got married a year after that. It’ll be 23 years this year.
It was a risk, but it was also an adventure.
Your “adventure” worked. Sometimes it ruins your life. A man should propose before moving or dump him. I wish I had.
There are no guarantees in life— you make the best choices you can at the time.
You can roadmap all the ways different choices could go right or wrong but it won’t prove anything.
Maybe you don’t move and you break up (either immediately or bcs long distance relationships are hard) — could be you never find a relationship as good or could be you do.
Maybe you make the ultimatum and get a ring, that doesn’t guarantee happily ever after— could be the stress of insisting on getting married actually undermines the relationship long term.
At some point you have to embrace, or at least learn to surf, the uncertainty of life, especially at 24. There is a whole multiverse of lives out there and no way to know which will be “best”.
So I am sorry things did not work out for you but I really don’t think refusing to tale any risks in relationships or life is a sensible option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice how only old people are saying they did this and it worked out, OP.
Sorry, hit send before finishing. Even 30 years ago, men were still far more willing to marry. It was less culturally acceptable to waste a woman’s time, and both the culture at large families were less tolerant of these low-commitment relationships.
I would never do this with a Gen Z or younger man. If you’re young enough for this to be an “adventure”, you’re young enough to find a guy you don’t have to move your whole life to be with too. Never shut off all your options for a guy who won’t marry you!
Never shut off your options. Period. a Man is not a plan.
This is not an issue of seeing a man as a plan here but being in love and trying to align it with life. There is no shortage of men or plans or jobs.
Anonymous wrote:It isn’t as though a ring means you live happily ever after.
OP - you need to decide if this move is good for you, regardless. Is this something that could be interesting or good for your career? If you break-up, what will happen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice how only old people are saying they did this and it worked out, OP.
Sorry, hit send before finishing. Even 30 years ago, men were still far more willing to marry. It was less culturally acceptable to waste a woman’s time, and both the culture at large families were less tolerant of these low-commitment relationships.
I would never do this with a Gen Z or younger man. If you’re young enough for this to be an “adventure”, you’re young enough to find a guy you don’t have to move your whole life to be with too. Never shut off all your options for a guy who won’t marry you!
Never shut off your options. Period. a Man is not a plan.