Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He was my brothers best friend forever and he was always around our house. I was four years younger so he always treated me like a little sister but in a really nice way. I didn’t see much of him once I went off to college but when I was 23 I ran into him at a bar in Chicago and he was quite surprised by how I had grown up. We got married two years later and my brother was his best man.
Your brother’s “best friend forever?” How old are you?
They have been best friends from ES. We are all in our in our 40s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He was my brothers best friend forever and he was always around our house. I was four years younger so he always treated me like a little sister but in a really nice way. I didn’t see much of him once I went off to college but when I was 23 I ran into him at a bar in Chicago and he was quite surprised by how I had grown up. We got married two years later and my brother was his best man.
Your brother’s “best friend forever?” How old are you?
They have been best friends from ES. We are all in our in our 40s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine, met her husband on wedding day. It was arranged and though both had full say, they left it on their families. He was working in US after his masters while she was working in India after her bachelors, both attended same engineering school but didn't overlap as they were 4 years apart. It's been 27 years and they've a really solid and happy marriage. A miracle.
That is not okay.
I know. I'm from same culture but never would've agreed to such arrangement. I don't have any issues with arranged marriage as its similar as friends/app/matchmaker setting you up on a blind date, after that take enough time to date to get to know each other before you agree to get engaged and then live together and plan for marriage. However, my friend was very focused on career and just wanted a prevetted partner with similar experiences and goals. They just got lucky it worked so well.
I don’t think it worked so well as much as she just gave in and won’t leave marriage because of cultural perception.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He was my brothers best friend forever and he was always around our house. I was four years younger so he always treated me like a little sister but in a really nice way. I didn’t see much of him once I went off to college but when I was 23 I ran into him at a bar in Chicago and he was quite surprised by how I had grown up. We got married two years later and my brother was his best man.
Your brother’s “best friend forever?” How old are you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine, met her husband on wedding day. It was arranged and though both had full say, they left it on their families. He was working in US after his masters while she was working in India after her bachelors, both attended same engineering school but didn't overlap as they were 4 years apart. It's been 27 years and they've a really solid and happy marriage. A miracle.
That is not okay.
I know. I'm from same culture but never would've agreed to such arrangement. I don't have any issues with arranged marriage as its similar as friends/app/matchmaker setting you up on a blind date, after that take enough time to date to get to know each other before you agree to get engaged and then live together and plan for marriage. However, my friend was very focused on career and just wanted a prevetted partner with similar experiences and goals. They just got lucky it worked so well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine, met her husband on wedding day. It was arranged and though both had full say, they left it on their families. He was working in US after his masters while she was working in India after her bachelors, both attended same engineering school but didn't overlap as they were 4 years apart. It's been 27 years and they've a really solid and happy marriage. A miracle.
That is not okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He was my brothers best friend forever and he was always around our house. I was four years younger so he always treated me like a little sister but in a really nice way. I didn’t see much of him once I went off to college but when I was 23 I ran into him at a bar in Chicago and he was quite surprised by how I had grown up. We got married two years later and my brother was his best man.
Your brother’s “best friend forever?” How old are you?
Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine, met her husband on wedding day. It was arranged and though both had full say, they left it on their families. He was working in US after his masters while she was working in India after her bachelors, both attended same engineering school but didn't overlap as they were 4 years apart. It's been 27 years and they've a really solid and happy marriage. A miracle.
Anonymous wrote:He was my brothers best friend forever and he was always around our house. I was four years younger so he always treated me like a little sister but in a really nice way. I didn’t see much of him once I went off to college but when I was 23 I ran into him at a bar in Chicago and he was quite surprised by how I had grown up. We got married two years later and my brother was his best man.