Grow old with me, the best is yet to be...
" My primer to getting married young.
maryrambin:
You know, I don’t have a problem being 27 and unmarried. But dating these days sucks. Period.
Most of the girls I know from high school and college no longer have this problem. In fact, they haven’t had to deal with this for a while because they got married soon after college.
In this episode of TMI I sit down with a couple of my girlfriends from high school to talk about what it’s like to get married so young. People always say it will never last, but I don’t think that’s true. Listen to Whitney and Alyssa, they are honest and open about how they work through all of it.
I dislike the commonly-held notion that getting married young is a mistake. I was married a day after my 22nd birthday and Brandon was 26. That’s considered very young, as I was told (rudely) by many people. Is it hard? Yes. Does it take a lot of work? Yes. But, then again, so does any marriage at any age.
Here is my unofficial primer for marriage, whether you are 21 or 41.
Ask yourself these questions:
* Are you a selfish person? Do you find the thought of making sacrifices for someone else uncomfortable? If you can’t answer a definitive no, you shouldn’t get married.
* Can you be honest about your thoughts and feeling on any subject without feeling pressure to compromise to the popular opinion? If you can’t express exactly what you want to someone else without fear of retribution, you shouldn’t get married.
* Are you willing to make friendships a lesser priority than the needs of your spouse? Friends are important, but a spouse is a partner—another half of you. If they’ve had a bad day, you have to prioritize how your evening plays out.
* Could you share a bank account without fearing what your significant other may find in the transactions? If you can’t be honest about finances or about what you spend your money on, you shouldn’t get married.
* Do you have a supportive, loving family who has legitimate concerns about your fiance? You shouldn’t get married to them.
* Consider your motives for marriage. If your spouse is not the first thing that pops into your head—if it’s a dress, your other married friends or a giant ring, then maybe you shouldn’t get married.
* Can people honestly describe you as a mature, grounded individual? If not, then you might not be ready for marriage.
* Have you cheated on a serious girlfriend/boyfriend/fiance/fiancee before? It’s natural to have the occasional fantasy. If you act on it, that’s a whole different maturity issue and/or emotional problem.
* Have you been dating so long that you just give into the idea that marriage is what comes next? Reevaluate your motives. Marriage isn’t and shouldn’t be an assumed light at the end of a long-dating tunnel.
* Are you getting married to get around the issue of no-premarital-sex that your religion or family dictates? You shouldn’t get married.
I’m no expert and context can change everything, but these are some general rules that I’ve found to be fairly accurate in their prediction of marital success. Brandon and I had serious, serious conversations before we got engaged. It was no flippant exercise of “the next step.” It was a deliberate, loving decision—which is exactly what you should think of it as. A decision: not a party, not a dress, not a ring, not a sign of social status, nothing. It’s all about the other person and what you want out of your life together. "
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