am I getting liberal in my old age?
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2006-03-15 8:59 PM |
Elite 3650 Laurium, MI | Subject: am I getting liberal in my old age? My fiance is going to move out to south dakota with me in October. We are going to get married July of 07, so we will be living together for just about a year before getting married. I just was on the phone with my mother and told her this, and she proceded to flip out on me. Now she's not all that fond of the fact I'm getting marrired or the fact I'm marrying Laura (long *** story), so this just added fuel to the fire. When I tried to get down to the reason she was mad about it, all I could get out of her was "it's just not done" and that I was disrespecting Laura by living with her out of wedlock. Now we are engaged and about as serious as serious can get, but she doesn't seem to understand why we just can't wait to get married. Now my mom is from a So I want some of your opinions. Am I truely evil or is she just being a typical smothering mom? |
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2006-03-15 9:22 PM in reply to: #370839 |
Champion 8903 | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? Moms can be funny. My mother was not too pleased when my son and his wife named their first born with a first name that is normally associated with the Jewish etnicity, and neither of them are Jewish. I think it took her a while to get over it. She's really an old throwback, still living in the 1950's and thinks the entire world is like the "I Love Lucy" show.
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2006-03-15 9:59 PM in reply to: #370839 |
Elite 2733 Venture Industries, | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? Follow your heart. It may lead you to places you shouldn't go, or into battles that you can't win. It may cause you to end up battered, bruised and bewildered. It may get crushed and trampled on. But more often than not it will also lead you to the tops of mountains and the greatests of victories. So I say follow your heart. Good luck and wishing you and your fiance a wonderful life together, |
2006-03-16 9:18 AM in reply to: #370839 |
Veteran 407 Dallas, Texas | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? Statistically, your mom is right. Couples who live togather prior to marriage are more likley to get divorced. Bill |
2006-03-16 9:21 AM in reply to: #371163 |
Philadelphia, south of New York and north of DC | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? SMUJD - 2006-03-16 10:18 AM Statistically, your mom is right. Couples who live togather prior to marriage are more likley to get divorced. Bill Having done this myself, I would now agree with your mom. The number I've heard is something like a 75% divorce rate. |
2006-03-16 9:27 AM in reply to: #370839 |
Champion 5183 Wisconsin | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? bad statistic: people who don't live together before getting married include the very religious and the very conservative who are also more likely to NOT divorce on principle, even if they are miserable... (but then again, I must admit I was slightly disappointed when my brother and his GF moved in together before getting engaged... so who knows...) |
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2006-03-16 9:30 AM in reply to: #370839 |
Veteran 247 | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? So here is what you can do. On July 7 of this year you can find yourself a nice justice of the peace and have a small wedding. then next year on your first anniversary have a big family and friends wedding with the big party and cake and dancing and brides maids in big fluffy dresses and a limo and minister and everything. Then everybody is happy. I lived with my wife for almost a month before our wedding. We did not sleep in our current bedroom until after the wedding. We have no planns on getting divorced. |
2006-03-16 9:36 AM in reply to: #371175 |
Elite 3650 Laurium, MI | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? Also that statistic includes people moving in before engagment. As in moving in together while still dating. We've been together for a year not living together and now that we are engaged, we are moving in. It's basicly the same thing as us getting married this fall and living together, except in the eyes of the law, the wedding isn't until next fall. Maybe my views on what a wedding means are just suspect. Personally the physical act of a wedding is a nice gesture and makes legal stuff easier (and tax stuff...), but in terms of commitment and the actual relationship, it's just a piece of paper on file in some dingy old courthouse. The wedding has nothing to do with whether the realtionship will work or not.
robbertcj - 2006-03-16 8:30 AM So here is what you can do. On July 7 of this year you can find yourself a nice justice of the peace and have a small wedding. then next year on your first anniversary have a big family and friends wedding with the big party and cake and dancing and brides maids in big fluffy dresses and a limo and minister and everything. Then everybody is happy. We actually thought about that. I happened to luck out and my dad's health insurence still covers me until I'm 25 as long as I'm in school....as long as I'm still single. Since that insurence is the most inclusive insurence I have ever been under (PT is fully covered without a refferal!), so I can't afford to give it up until the last possible minute. Edited by vortmax 2006-03-16 9:40 AM |
2006-03-16 9:44 AM in reply to: #371189 |
Veteran 407 Dallas, Texas | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? vortmax - 2006-03-16 9:36 AM We actually thought about that. I happened to luck out and my dad's health insurence still covers me until I'm 25 as long as I'm in school....as long as I'm still single. Since that insurence is the most inclusive insurence I have ever been under (PT is fully covered without a refferal!), so I can't afford to give it up until the last possible minute. This may sound overly harsh, but picking good insurance coverage over the woman you love is really sorry. Bill |
2006-03-16 9:51 AM in reply to: #371204 |
Elite 3650 Laurium, MI | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? i'm not picking it over her. She agrees with me. There is no point in getting married sooner rather then later and giving that up. I also can't afford to lose perscription drug coverage. I'm kind of bound to that. Besides, we want our wedding date to be 7-7-07, which is past when I lose coverage anyway. |
2006-03-16 9:51 AM in reply to: #371189 |
Elite Veteran 1817 Cedar Rapids, Iowa | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? People spout statistics on this issue as a means to promote their own opinion on the matter. Relationships are hard, and take a lot of work, and if you are not committed to that hard work, you are doomed regardless of your marital status. Personally, I lived with my husband for 10 years before we got married - married now for three years in August, all is well. Just to fly further in the face of statistics, we were both in relationships before (him married 10 years, me living together for 6 years) AND we both had kids so we blended our families. Statistically, we had about a .000001 chance of making it work. Also, my 5 brothers and sisters all married their spouses before living with them, and every single one of them has been divorced at least once. I have the longest term relationship of everyone in my family. Love your family - be respectful toward their opinions - but for goodness sake man, live your own life. If you're going to question your own beliefs every time someone challenges them (no matter who they are), then you don't know yourself well enough to be making these kinds of life decisions. Best of luck to you. |
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2006-03-16 9:55 AM in reply to: #371163 |
Pro 5153 Helena, MT | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? SMUJD - 2006-03-16 7:18 AM Statistically, your mom is right. Couples who live togather prior to marriage are more likley to get divorced. Bill Actually, one group for which they can't squeeze this one out of the stats is couples who are engaged before living together. So there goes that theory. |
2006-03-16 10:01 AM in reply to: #370839 |
Veteran 205 Adel | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? My wife and I lived together and were engaged for 2 years before we got married. Her parents, who are pretty devout catholics, were not thrilled at first. But we lived in Chicago and paying an additional $1000/month to live in separate places made no sense. I can tell you that living together during that time actually made our relationship stronger than ever. I know the statistics are out there, but it's really hard for me to buy into them with how happy and complete my family is today. Just my 2 cents, but the statistics include such a wide range of people and backgrounds that they really don't tell the full story as to why some of these relationships don't pan out. |
2006-03-16 10:05 AM in reply to: #370839 |
Crystal Lake, IL | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? Haven't we all heard these arguments in other places? 1. As cited above, higher % of divorce rate. 2. Finding out what it is like to live with a person after you are married is a recipe for either a divorce or a miserable marriage. For those of you out there who are or have been married, when you fight/argue is it about anything that had to do with whether you lived together first or not? Isn't a divorce about the marriage not working? Don't tell me statistics pro or con either side. Regardless of whether you are currently married, divorced, happy, miserable ask yourself this question. Is your current situation the result of whether you lived together or did not before you got married? I'd be curious to hear from people on both sides. I realize this is a hijack of sorts so I'll try to address the OP again. I knew on my first date with my wife that I would marry her and she was my soul mate. The earth moved that day for me. I looked at my hand, then passed hers over mine, and looked at my hand again. It was different. My whole world changed when she entered it. She moved in with me a month later and we were married about a year after that. The logistics of when we got married had nothing to do with our marriage and everything to do with the wedding. The event of wedding and the life of a marriage have very little to do with each other in my mind. Vortmax - you've already thought it out, discussed it with her, made a plan that works for the two of you. Your success or failure as a married couple will be 100% dependent on the two of you and you two alone. If that's what all y'all (my fav new term-I learned it from a Texan!) feel that's the plan that gives you most chance for success then do it. Forget everyone else. |
2006-03-16 10:08 AM in reply to: #370839 |
Master 4101 Denver | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? You can use statistics to prove anything. 82% of people know that. Bottom line is you have already decided you want to spend the rest of your life with your fiancee so I say, why not start now. |
2006-03-16 10:08 AM in reply to: #370839 |
Buttercup 14334 | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? vortmax - 2006-03-15 8:59 PM So I want some of your opinions. Am I truely evil or is she just being a typical smothering mom? I won't characterize your mother or her intentions. I will, however, encourage you to make your own decisions. It's your life, you get to make your own mistakes (not saying it's a mistake). It's not your mother's job or place to make choices for you. That's YOUR job. Go - fall down. Pick yourself up. Make mistakes. Make decisions that are right for you. |
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2006-03-16 10:10 AM in reply to: #370839 |
Pro 5153 Helena, MT | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? I would have to say it's just Moms. When Eric and I moved in together, she had all sorts of nightmare scenarios, ranging from 'why buy the cow?' to horrible breakups, no legal protection, yada, yada, yada. We weren't engaged and didn't have any 'deadlines' set for when we should be. You know, I'm not even certain whether he felt he would marry me or not when we moved in. I knew he'd marry me, though. (Edit: we did talk about it extensively and I was satisfied that he did that was more commitment and put us, at the very least, on the track to marriage. I didn't just move in, not knowing his feelings). My Mom got over it pretty quickly, though, when she really thought about it. Statistics do not equal predestination and we are both very stable human beings. She knew what our relationship was like and that we had a very healthy loving relationship. Moving in first was simply what was right for us. After we moved to Helena, I was working at a job without health insurance, so we started talking about stuff. I think we decided to get married on Friday and went to the courthouse and did it the following Thursday. Not that it wasn't a topic that had been kicked around before. We didn't exactly do it on a whim. Now, we're married and have utmost feeling of commitment to eachother. We're having the ceremony (the 'spiritual marriage' as opposed to the legal one) in June. Your Mom will get over it. She might never like it, but she will accept it eventually, if she's at all reasonable. Edited to add: I agree with Tri Iowa and had meant to include it in my little story. Living together first made us stronger and was an essential step, I think, in the development of our relationship. For some people, it wouldn't be the right thing and I recognize that, but for us, it was. It's living together with no increased feeling of commitment that is potentially damaging to the relationship. Edited by kimj81 2006-03-16 10:15 AM |
2006-03-16 11:18 AM in reply to: #371248 |
Elite 3650 Laurium, MI | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? Thanks for all your encouragment. I really wasn't posting it as a "what should I do" type of question. I (we) have already made the decision and there is no stopping that. I just wanted some encouragment that yes I am being rational. I've heard all the nightmare scenarios too. As far as I can tell, my mom is still in the denial stage of the "5 stages of grief." |
2006-03-16 11:18 AM in reply to: #370839 |
molto veloce mama 9311 | Subject: RE: am I getting liberal in my old age? my husband and i moved in together after we'd been dating for about 6 months. we lived on grand ave. in st. paul, as did my older brother and his girlfriend (now wife of 13+ years) and my younger brother and his girlfriend (now wife of 4+ years). my parents, who are in their 60s, teased us that we were all 'living in sin on grand avenue' but it was only light hearted teasing. they were fine with the idea. bill was the first guy i was involved with that i had lived with, and i probably would have waited more than 6 months to move in together, but both of our annual rental contract were up (and we were always together anyway, why not save some $$$?). because it was the first time i'd lived with someone i was dating, i said that i didn't want to talk about marriage (which had already come up) until we'd lived together for at least a year. while the subject did come up before the year was out, bill picked the one year anniversary of moving in together to propose. sweet, huh? sort of - 'the year is up, let's talk about marriage - marry me!' anyway, this fall we will be celebrating 7 years of wedded bliss. so, there you go, three examples (midwestern even!) that 'it's just not done' is a bit outdated. marriage is a big commitment, and one you are obviously taking very seriously. i think if your mom isn't happy about who you are marrying (and some moms are tough to please - she wants the 'best' for you, which may be a woman she's imagined that doesn't exist), she may just be trying to find ways of expressing her concerns. if you and laura are planning on having kids someday, take this as one of many opportunities to say 'mom, i love you, and appreciate your concern. you might not agree, but this is my choice to make.' |