Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a young bride is beautiful. If you have fun in high school and college you're not missing much "fun" in your 20s. Get married after college and focus on kids and career.
lol
Anonymous wrote:Being a young bride is beautiful. If you have fun in high school and college you're not missing much "fun" in your 20s. Get married after college and focus on kids and career.
Anonymous wrote:The research is pretty clear that waiting to marry results in stronger marriages. That said, if a woman wants kids, she shouldn't waste time on bad relationships. (She should also avoid bad relationships for her own sake.)
Anonymous wrote:These things all boil down to luck. I met my DH in college, married soon after, had kids in my mid 20s, stayed home while they were little, and embarked on a career in my early 30s. I feel like I had my cake and ate it too. I did not plan this, I just happened to meet a good man early in my life. I have friends now changing diapers in their mid 40s who have had to mommy track their careers. The unexpected benefit of meeting my DH early in life, was good for our financial security. I feel like these things boil down to being at the right place at the right time and being in an emotional place to accept love when it comes.
Anonymous wrote:I married at 22, but I don't encourage others to necessarily do the same. I just happen to marry an amazing guy, I saw that he was amazing and I just married him. We took turns getting our degree, I worked while he went to law school, now he is supporting me as I start med school in upcoming year. We won't have kids until early 30s but it has been nice to build something together over the past years.
women shouldn't feel that they CANT get married early if they want to be ambitious but one must (!) marry the right guy.
The biggest risk to marry young is marrying a douche bag who doesn't allow a woman to get her education, so you may be left in late twenties with kids and no way to support them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a hard time seeing how having an abortion at 25 proves anything other than how lucky it was that you had that option available to you, if you weren't ready to be a parent.
No, my career trajectory would not have changed. So at the very least I'd have the same career plus a beautiful daughter or son.
Anonymous wrote:I think if we could all magically know who our soul mate/perfect match was and married him/her at a young age, and live happily ever after, this would be ideal. But most people aren't this fortunate, and need to live and grow a bit before meeting the right person. That doesn't happen on any particular timetable.
Anonymous wrote:You people are funny. What do you think of people like Paris Hilton, Amal Clooney, Kate Middleton, and Marissa Meyer? All of whom wasted away their 20s. Some of whom wasted away their 30s.
It's so strange to me that you'll advocate wasting your life for nothing...but you do you.
Anonymous wrote:Women need to be taught that they should be married by after 28
Anonymous wrote:OP, there are always trade-offs to having children early or late. Hell, there are trade-offs, period. We all tried to do our best with the info we have at the time.
I met DH at 26, married at 30, and still didn't have a kid until I was 35. If I have another, I'll probably be 39 by the time it's born. What can you do?
Anonymous wrote:These things all boil down to luck. I met my DH in college, married soon after, had kids in my mid 20s, stayed home while they were little, and embarked on a career in my early 30s. I feel like I had my cake and ate it too. I did not plan this, I just happened to meet a good man early in my life. I have friends now changing diapers in their mid 40s who have had to mommy track their careers. The unexpected benefit of meeting my DH early in life, was good for our financial security. I feel like these things boil down to being at the right place at the right time and being in an emotional place to accept love when it comes.