T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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905.1 | Of course I always said that I believe in divorce. | CONCRT::SHAW | live and let live | Thu Nov 16 1989 15:37 | 31 |
| FWIW
I knew my wife as a nodding aquaintence for about 6 months. We then dated for
about 3 months, decided to get married and were married about 10 months later.
I guess I knew what I was looking for, I also knew I wasn't interested in dating
for years before getting married. It's interesting to note that my wife told
me when we met that she wasn't going to get married before she was 25, she was
18 at the time.
I didn't ask anyone what they thought. Nobody told me not to. A few people
told me I was crazy to get married so young. Of course I am fairly strong
willed so many people (who know me) won't bother to disagree with me on such an
issue.
I am still married and intend to stay so. Happily sometimes, not so happy
other times (my wife is strong willed also). 11+ years at this point.
I don't think I would have known my wife any better had I dated her longer.
I was reasonably accurate at understanding "who" she was.
Is the a "right" time period? Not if you ask me. My best friend lived with
his girl friend for 5 years, got married and then got divorced less than 2
years later.
The key is to know what you want out of life and to determine if your potential
spouse will change it adversly. Don't expect perfect bliss nor should you
expect the person to change, though you have to be prepared to deal with them
if you do.
Stan
|
905.2 | Depends on the couple | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | Good Tea. Nice house. | Thu Nov 16 1989 15:53 | 12 |
| IMHO, "Too Soon" = before BOTH of you are ready.
My friend, Terri, met Roger on a Friday. Saturday they were engaged,
Monday they eloped. This happened 17 years ago and they are still
happily married, with two lovely teenage daughters.
On the flip side, another friend of mine married his lady love after
seven years of being/living together. One year later, they divorced.
Go figure.
Carol
|
905.3 | Is a long courtship a sign | CREDIT::SSMITH | | Thu Nov 16 1989 16:09 | 5 |
| Not to get too far off the track, but what about the people who
do wait a long time (4 or more years) before getting married?
Are their chances of divorce greater? Did they wait so long, because
they knew in their gut that it wasn't going to work - but somehow or
another (maybe wishful thinking) ended up at the alter anyway?
|
905.4 | | HUB::BRUNO | | Thu Nov 16 1989 17:03 | 8 |
| I agree with the assertion that there is no formula or set length
of time for everyone. Dating for too long can be as bad as impulse-
marrying. The pair of friends I have, whose marriage I most admire,
dated during their senior year of college, and married right after
graduation. However, I think they could have made the decision a month
after they met and still had just as solid a union.
Greg
|
905.5 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | So Many Women, So Little Time. | Thu Nov 16 1989 18:07 | 12 |
| As one who got engaged relatively quickly (we got engaged six
months after we met, but we "knew" we were going to marry with a
couple of months), it seemed obvious that Cynthia was right for
me within a couple of weeks. (My friends tell me that the night
after I met her I talked of nothing else.)
We were both "ready to get married", and had each broken off
relationships in the past few years because the other person
wanted to wait a while, but I think that's only a small part of
it. It was clearly the best match either of us had ever had.
--David
|
905.6 | Just my 3� worth... | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Satin and Velvet | Thu Nov 16 1989 18:09 | 38 |
| I think it depends on who you are, and your maturity level(s).
At 18, I met my now ex on December 2, 1973, and we were married on
January 19, 1974. My divorce was final on June 15, 1988. (I think that's
the date :-)...)... However, we were legally separated several years
before that, He just liked making me make my lawyer rich... Neither one of
us should have gotten married at the age, but then again, when you are 18
you know more than anyone, right?
My last "real" relationship lasted 3 years. After three years, it was
clear that we had grown as much together as we could, and marriage was
out of the question (He was Jewish, I wasn't and his parents figured
into the picture ever too strongly), so we broke off the "relation" side
of the relationship, and now are just close friends.
I've played matchmaker twice in DEC within the last 4 years, one couple
was engaged three years before they finally tied the knot last month,
the other, they dated 6 months, and they were engaged. However this
last couple were (well still are) both in there mid 30's and they both
were "right" for each other.
As you reach your 30's and up, I think you know what makes you happy
more then you do at 20... early to mid to almost late 20's I would advise
ANYONE to wait it out, with a long engagement, and make sure its what you
really need/want/etc. After 30 - (no, I don't know why I choose that
mystical age!), if its right, and you know it, then waiting forever just
seems like a waste of time to me...
I think it also depends on whether this is a first marriage or
second/third/etc. Also are there kids involved? All this needs to be
taken into effect. If its a second/third/etc marriage - is it a rebound
marriage? With kids, there are just too many questions to consider, but
they play a very important role in how long you should wait before you
get married also.
As a light side - I tell my girls that they can get married after they
turn 42, maybe :-)
|
905.7 | | SNOC01::MYNOTT | Hugs to all Kevin Costner lookalikes | Thu Nov 16 1989 18:40 | 9 |
| Gail, I agree with everything. I married at 18, and also chose 30
as about the right age, but can't think of any reason.
I have stood hands on hips, sounding like a fishwife, with both my
daughters about marrying early (^; I'm hoping the message got
through....
..dale
|
905.8 | how much is 2c worth nowadays? | DEBIT::WATSON | you can't always want what you get | Thu Nov 16 1989 18:41 | 13 |
| I tend to think of what the record is for a relationship I've been in
to stay "good" (whatever that means). I would be scared to get married
to someone I'd been with for less than that amount of time. I'd think:
"I've had other relationships that lasted this long, and they broke."
I know that this is far from being rational - there's no sensible basis
for assuming that the relationship that sets the new record is going to
continue being good.
But, like many people, I'd like to have a springboard of confidence to
make the leap of faith...
Andrew.
|
905.9 | How well do you know what you want? | POGO::REINBOLD | | Thu Nov 16 1989 20:02 | 43 |
| I agree entirely with the last paragraph in .1, and with the last
couple of replies. It depends on whether you really know what you
want. If you're about 20, you think you know what you want, but
haven't exerienced enough of life and relationships to really know
what drives you crazy, and what you can't live without. I think you
fall in love in a different way when you're young. I made an 8-year
mistake at age 20 - my parents told me so, but of course I didn't
listen. By age 30, I understood what they had been trying to tell me.
But it took a bad marriage and considerable dating before I really
had a clue as to what it would take for me to stay in a relationship.
I had dated people who were fun and attractive, but they were narrow-
minded, or just out for a good time, or losers, or spent all their
time in bars. When I switched to someone extremely successfull,
kindness and understanding were missing. When I found kindness,
assertiveness was missing. So over a period of years I compiled a
list of qualities I had to have in a lasting relationship. Maybe I'm
just a slow learner :-) - after seeing what I've gone through, my
daughter may figure out what's right for her at a much earlier age
than I did (35). She impresses me with her perceptions of men, and
she's only 14. For me the days of falling in love and losing sight
of everything else are probably over - I *can't* fall in love with
someone who isn't responsible, or reasonably intelligent, or
considerate. It's much harder to fall in love in my 30's than it
was when I was younger.
Like someone else mentioned, I learned that there was a sort of time
limit for most relationships. If I was still interested after the
first date, I'd probably be interested for at least 6 weeks. If it
made it past 6 weeks, it would go 3 months. Most of them didn't make
it past that. But it took a few years before I became perceptive
enough that I could predict in advance how long it would last. I
finally learned what I would tire of, and what I really wanted. About
2 weeks after meeting my current husband, I knew I'd still be
interested after 3 months.
It boils down to how well you know what you want, and how perceptive
you are regarding the other person. And as .1 said, don't expect
them to change, but be flexible if they do. People usually don't
stop doing annoying things, but if one of you decides you want to
make a change, then ideally the other person can support that.
Paula
|
905.10 | | SAC::PHILPOTT_I | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Fri Nov 17 1989 11:42 | 24 |
|
As a youngster it seemed that I was destined to marry my near neighbour: we met
when I was 6 and she was 5, we attended parties together, and then as teenaged
years arrived we went to concerts and movies together. Dating moved on to being
engaged - quite formally - and in time we planned to marry.
Then 2 days before the ceremony she broke it off and moved in with her lesbian
girlfriend.
It took a long time to come back from that disaster, though Astrid and I
remained [platonic] friends. In time - 19 years - I moved to America and
there...
A friend introduced me to my [now] wife - we went out for the evening, agreed to
a date the following evening and when I picked her up I proposed. We'd have been
married ASAP, but I was 3000 miles from my family and she was 12000 from hers,
so it took a while for her to get her Mother's permission, and for us to do the
arrangements. We were married within 6 weeks though.
Still happily married? you'd better believe it, but then it is less than 3 years
yet so who knows, but ... we're working on keeping it together - all I have to
do now is learn enough Thai to know what she is angry with me about :-)
/. Ian .\
|
905.11 | Value=(Investment*Time*Effort)/negative_behaviour))*2 | WOODRO::EARLY | Bob Early CSS/NSG Dtn 264-6252 | Fri Nov 17 1989 12:31 | 40 |
| re: .0
> -< How soon is "too soon" to get married? >- ???
#1 Too soon, is before both are comfortable with the idea, and can
make a realistic COMMITMENT to maintain the marriage relationship.
I feel that, other than this, the replies between here and .0 pretty
well sum up my feelings and observations.
I felt partly amused by the person who picked "30" as the right
age, but they didn't know why.
Some people (son picked age 26, friend of family was selected by his
parents at age 35 .. 2nd generation Armenian). This is the reasons I
was given by some of people. By age (mid 30's) most people have their
lifes expectations and wealth buildup in process (good jobs, many work
hours behind them, business as secure as its going to get, maturity in
process, running around completed, experiences satisfied,
heavy_education completed and so forth).
Age 30 amused me, because I picked 49 (after two other unsuccesful
picks). In a way, its sort of like picking stocks or bonds. It is an
invenstment, and after you make your investment you stay with it, or
forget it. Unlike gambling, where 'a pure gamble' is strictly chance, a
viable realtionship is a PRO-active sport or investment.
In short, they are now more ready,and can now settle down to the more
tranquil life as they approach the "middle years".
Sort of like gardening or getting an education. What you GAIN from it,
is GENERALY proportinal to what you get out of it. This assumes that
the other person is doing the same as yourself. If you can't belieive
that the other person is committing to do their best by YOU, (and you
by them), then see statement #1.
Bob
|
905.12 | YES! | ROYALT::NIKOLOFF | Free fallin | Fri Nov 17 1989 12:39 | 14 |
|
-< How well do you know what you want? >-
Great reply Paula!...and as I was reading it, it was like reading my
life...whew. Yeah, I did all that too at a very young age (17)....
I really feel the part about looking for so much more as you get older
is very true. Like intelligence, common sense and last but far from
least a "sense of humor"...these things are so important to me now!.
I am still single and I suppose a little 'commitment shy' but happy.
Thanks again for putting into words, what is so true....Best of Luck
Mikki
|
905.13 | | CISM::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Fri Nov 17 1989 13:07 | 24 |
| Boy, I'm not usually in this conference; just dropped in to see
what goes on and found this topic! So here's my $.02:
My husband and I met in early January of '87. We married in November
of '87. He was 30-something and I was in my late 20s. Never in
my life would I ever envision myself meeting & marrying so fast.
We had reached a point in our lives where we knew what we wanted
[or what we didn't want]. Fortunately, we found each other and
the timing was right, we were right for each other, and we fell
in love. However, if we had met when I was much younger--
I don't think we would have married in a "short time." I certainly
wasn't ready to marry when I was younger, and neither was he.
Our families and friends were supportive, and still are [there was
no reason for them not to be]. We just celebrated our second
anniversary, and I look forward to at least another 50 anniversaries!
Everybody's story is different, though... and one of my old favorite
expressions, "There are no guaranties in life," comes to mind.
My only advice [for what it's worth] is: if you're at all unsure,
then WAIT.
|
905.14 | Age? When you are ready....... | MEMIT::MAHONEY | ANA MAHONEY DTN 223-4189 | Fri Nov 17 1989 13:37 | 13 |
| "How soon is "too soon" to get married"? If you doubt...IT IS TOO SOON!
The only valid reason to get married is if you ARE DEEPLY IN LOVE with
the person, regardles your age. I married at 19, was very sure of my
feelings and most importantly, was very sure of his values and
personality, it did not clash with mine and on top of that, we were
deeply in love. So! we married. At 22 I had two kids and at 30 my
third and last. Twenty five years later we love and respect each other
as the first day we met, our older kids finished college and got good
jobs and we still feel young, go out and enjoy life. If anybody would
asked me if given a change would I repeat what I did I would say YES!
I would change NOTHING. To have a great and close family is one of the
most satisfying accomplishments a human being can have...I consider
myself a very fortunate woman.
|
905.15 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Fri Nov 17 1989 20:27 | 6 |
| > How soon is too soon to get married?
Anytime before your own funeral.
Kris
|
905.16 | | NACAD2::KRISTY | Cosmic Woobie Thang! | Sun Nov 19 1989 15:13 | 6 |
| My husband and I married 6 months and 2 days after we met. It'll be 8
years together next August. We've had our ups and downs, but a heck a
lot more ups than downs and we've got a beautiful little girl which
adds to the ups even more.
-- Kristy
|
905.17 | Welcome to the REAL world | WFOV11::SPORBERT | You aint kiddin' | Mon Nov 20 1989 06:18 | 15 |
|
Ok I think I agree with those who got married after a day, in
a matter of speaking. I was in a relationship that just ended after
2 years mostly (but not all) because my -ex left me for another man.
I feel if we had been married things probably would've worked out.
When you're married you have more of a commitment to stay together.
Ya' know for better and for worse and alimony and all that...
Even though I don't think that's the way you should feel about marriage,
it just seems to be the way things are.
So the next date I have I am going to propose to her, ANY TAKERS????
-Ed
|
905.18 | The odds are the same | CURIE::DONCHIN | | Mon Nov 20 1989 11:47 | 28 |
| I don't think being married vs. living together means a couple has a
better chance of staying together. Anyone in a long-term relationship
has to work at that relationship in order to keep it going, and
long-term relationships, married or otherwise, rarely end because
of one fight or at a moment's notice.
About how you know when it's time to get married, I married my husband
1 1/2 years after we started dating. We knew each other for about a
year before we started dating (as friends), but didn't think about the
future before we became "involved." Within WEEKS after we became
involved, I knew this relationship was different than any one I'd had
before. Seven months later, we were engaged, but we planned a long-term
engagement so that we could live together and get to know one another
better before marriage. In our case, all our friendship and dating was
done long distance with just a few extended visits, so spending some
time living together was important. Although we had our ups and downs
during that time, I only felt more confident about the relationship as
the wedding day approached.
Now we're married over five years and have a beautiful daughter. I love
my life and am thankful for having met and married my husband. Although
I may not always tell him how much he means to me (or yell a little too
much), I wouldn't hesitate to give up everything for him and Jamie.
Sorry I got so mushy, but follow what others have said before--if it
feels right, DO IT, and if you have ANY doubts, DON'T!
Nancy-
|
905.19 | | SAC::PHILPOTT_I | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Mon Nov 20 1989 12:23 | 12 |
|
Of course when I replied I told the truth, the whole truth, and avoided the issue
Both my wife and I were living in the US on [legitimate] non-resident visas. Had we
not gotten married it is probable that today we would be half a world apart and
playing the red-tape game with British Immigration. It was *much* easier to get
Ann a visa for settlement in the UK by being married than by being fiancees.
Further I am not at all sure how the American INS would have viewed it if we had
wound up living together in the circumstances of our visas...
/. Ian .\
|
905.20 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Wed Nov 22 1989 10:16 | 48 |
| Personally, I would never marry anyone I hadn't lived with for at
least two years. This is because I know myself well enough to know
that I can feel madly in love with somebody and then later on notice
things about them that would make it seem ludicrous for me to promise
to spend the rest of my life with them. I figure that if I ever
wanted to marry somebody after living with them for two yrs. that
at least the marriage would stand a chance. Of course, it's possible
I might spend more than 2 yrs. living with somebody that I didn't
want to marry, since I don't know if I'd really ever want to get
married again anyway.
I've been telling my daughter ever since she was a baby that I don't
want her to get married, or have a baby, until she at least has
her bachelor's degree. That would at least make me feel that should
her marriage fail she will at least be able to support herself with
a decent job. Whenever I tell her that now she says, "Mum, I don't
know if I ever want to get married anyway. Why can't people just
date all their lives?" But, she's only 15, and will probably change
her mind when she falls in love someday. The interesting thing
to me is that I can't remember when my No. 1 Ambition wasn't to
get married and have a baby. I think I was born with that ambition!
(It no longer is my #1 ambition, since I already did it and don't
have any burning desire to repeat it.)
But, my daughter says she'd rather have a Ph.D., than a husband
so I hope she at least gets her bachelor's first!
I married my ex-husband 1 yr. and 4 months after we met. We began
dating the day we met. We were happily married for 7 yrs., not
as happily married for 5 1/2 yrs., then divorced, and now are good
friends. I moved in with my former SO 1 1/2 months after meeting
him, and I now think it's the craziest thing I ever did as I had
no idea what I was getting into, and he dumped me 2 1/2 yrs. later
anyway. I think that experience more than my marriage has affected
my ideas. My parents knew each other casually for 5 yrs., then
dated for 5 more yrs., and were very happily married for 37 yrs.
until he died. But, the interesting part is that my mother fell
in love with my father at first sight. It just took her 5 yrs.
to get a date!
I guess there are no guarantees but I just wouldn't feel comfortable
jumping into anything as serious as marriage.
Re .15, tsk-tsk. You sound like my ex-boyfriend. You changed your
mind about the homeless, maybe you'll change your mind about marriage,
too. :-)
Lorna
|
905.21 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | rock me down like a slot machine | Wed Nov 22 1989 11:54 | 44 |
|
RE: Lorna
> Re .15, tsk-tsk. You sound like my ex-boyfriend. You changed your
> mind about the homeless, maybe you'll change your mind about marriage,
> too. :-)
I don't think you've really read a lot of Kris' notes to know
where that comes from. Not having a desire to get married is
NOT bad. It does NOT mean that you have something "wrong"
with you, or that you are sour about relationships and what
marriage entails.
I'm not even sure I ever want to get married, anymore. And
Kris has a lot to do with that (thanks Kris). The first time
he asked me why I wanted to get married, I brought up the
wish that I have to dress up and be the center of attention
for just one day (I've never even went to proms and such in
highschool, so I've never had a pampered, dress up day). I
dream of a white leather wedding gown. Kris really has made
me think of WHY I would want marriage, and I can't find any
real reason, besides selfish ones.
But WHY, WHY do I want to get married? If I do, I will never
make the promise to "forevermore cherish and love that person
til death do we part". I'm in a relationships for the here
and now and because they feel right. And when/if they are no
longer "right", it's better to move on amicably. A marriage
certificate is not going to do me anything different than
living with someone. And living with someone I don't have to
lie and make commitments for forever.
I'm not soured on marriage, I just realize that it is a very
insignificant part of a relationship with a person for me.
You live, you love, you move on. I don't view divorce as a
"bad" thing....ever.....only a moving on when things are not
right and good any longer. When people have grown other
directions..........................
kath
|
905.22 | How about "Anytime before retirement"? | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Wed Nov 22 1989 12:44 | 38 |
| Re. Lorna
> Re .15, tsk-tsk. You sound like my ex-boyfriend. You changed your
> mind about the homeless, maybe you'll change your mind about marriage,
> too. :-)
"You sound like my ex-boyfriend" are the words every man dreads
to hear.
Maybe you're right. But I've given more thought and been exposed to
marriage more than I have been to the poor. With every thought and
every opportunity comes a firmer conviction that, for me at least,
marriage signifies too much of an end than a beginning.
Some of us are raised to look at life from a profit/loss point of view
and we see the world in terms of a pursuit for net gain. This is true
for all aspects of life, not only material or monetary considerations.
This "doctrine of gain" becomes a rule by which all judgments are made.
And in the end the things we do, we do in order to enrich ourselves
emotionally, materially, physically, spiritually or mentally.
Some of us have found that being alone is more rewarding in every
aspect mentioned.
re. Kath;
> I'm not even sure I ever want to get married, anymore. And
> Kris has a lot to do with that (thanks Kris).
See that!? Women only have to have contact with me and they rethink
their thoughts on marriage. Those who are single wish to stay that
way, those who are married appreciate their husbands, those
who are divorced go back to their ex.
Tell the truth, Kathy. Is it the fish ties and pocket protector or the
"Norman Bates Fan Club" tattoo?
Kris
|
905.23 | i wasn't picking on him, Kath | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Wed Nov 22 1989 14:20 | 14 |
| Re Kath and Kris, I was teasing and being a bit ironic at the same
time (you know, never say never). I'm not a great advocate of marriage
myself, although I'm not completely against it. Like anything it's
got it's bad and it's good points. I'm in no major rush to do it
again. I think I've gotten fairly good at enjoying the moment and
moving on :-), once I realized there are always going to be more
moments. (as long as I'm alive anyway!) :-)
Lorna
P.S. I know I haven't read a lot of Kris' notes but I remember
a few things - anti-guns, anti-marriage, awakening compassion for
the poor :-), right?
|
905.24 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Barking Spider Industries | Wed Nov 22 1989 14:31 | 20 |
| re: .22 (Kris)
� With every thought and every opportunity comes a firmer conviction
� that, for me at least, marriage signifies too much of an end than
� a beginning.
Am I alone in thinking those have that ring of "famous last words"?
Why is it I have the notion that "SHE" hasn't walked into Kris'
life (but ineveitably will)?
I s'pose it's because I was saying much the same thing when the woman
who was to become my wife blind-sided me. How well I remember the
time just prior to that when I was utterly convinced that I was simply
one of the few who don't marry. I had a very satisfactory single
life and was quite comfortable with the "fact" that I was to be a
lifelong bachelor when "SHE" appeared.
Damn Murphy and his stupid laws!
Steve
|
905.26 | But I'll take those biceps any day. ;-) | SSDEVO::GALLUP | lips like sugar | Wed Nov 22 1989 15:03 | 13 |
|
re. Kris
> Tell the truth, Kathy. Is it the fish ties and pocket protector or the
> "Norman Bates Fan Club" tattoo?
Most definately the pocket protector.
kat
|
905.27 | dern it, I'm ratholing againi | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | doubleplusgood Meta Box | Wed Nov 22 1989 15:29 | 8 |
| re .25, Mike-
> And chest of glass. Or was that rubber?
Gosh, I thought the steel/glass dichotomy was in reference to his
jaw. Kris, I think you're just too subtle for us nitpickers.
DougO
|
905.28 | It's steel, you hirsute MENNOTErs! | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Wed Nov 22 1989 21:23 | 74 |
| re. Last few:
It's steel, dammit! Steel chin! Steel chest! Hair does not grow on
steel! Call be baby-face and I'll drool on you.
re. Steve
There are "SHE's" in my life. And I love each one in their own special
way. But I cherish them the most because they are free to do as they
please and they still spend time with me. (I can't bring myself
to tell them that "my" Amex card belongs to DEC.)
> Damn Murphy and his laws.
Eddie Murphy became a politician?
re. Lorna
My stance on marriage is like my stance on guns; I can't understand the
attraction and I can't even come close to comprehending why anyone
would find either of them important.
I've rattled it around inside my brain, where there is much room for
things to rattle, for the past 10 years and I still have a tough time
grasping why someone would want to be married. To have children? Then
it is the desire to have children which is the motivating factor and
marriage is the only socially accepted way to achieve that. To have
someone special always there? Then the issue is one of ownership and
the amount of control you have over another person's life and the
expectation you hold for the "performance of their duty". Support and
caring and understanding are like presents: It's better to give or
receive them when not required or demanded.
Whenever I attend weddings and hear the vows being exchanged I always
ask myself, "How can you two say that?" How can anyone promise that,
for the rest of their lives, they will find the other person
interesting, stimulating, attractive, supporting, understanding,
patient, communicative and giving and also be able to remain as such in
the eyes of the other? Not only for the rest of their lives, but on a
near-continuous basis.
I dearly love Mozart's music and Shakespeare's writing. You've got to
be smoking something illegal to take a sacred vow to love, honour and
cherish them forever. I can't see that marriage is any different, in
fact it would be even tougher to make such a vow since, in the case of
Mozart, the music will be the same in 15 years. Not so with you or the
person to whom you have vowed *eternal* love.
My father, whom I have come to appreciate as the most intelligent man I
know, tells me that marriage is not about love or about communication
or about passion; it is about commitment. All other aspects of a
marriage have levels which always change and, as the case may happen,
there will be times when there is no love in a marriage. But
commitment is either there or it is not. There is no such thing as
being partially committed to anything. In order to be committed one
has to be 100% certain. He confides in me that if he had understood
that when he was 29 he would have remained single for the rest of his
life. Maybe it's genetic.
I get defensive about this issue at certain times of the year. It
always happens just before family gatherings where the aunts question
my sexual preference and the uncles all think I'm boinking my brains
out with different women every night. Family...
re. Kath
> -< But I'll take those biceps any day. ;-) >-
You caused my VT to catch fire.
Kris
|
905.29 | I wouldn't call it a baby face.... ;-) | SSDEVO::GALLUP | i get up, i get down... | Mon Nov 27 1989 11:18 | 60 |
|
>Note 905.28 by BRADOR::HATASHITA
>> Call be baby-face and I'll drool on you.
Promises, promises. ;-)
RE: stance on marriage
I was once told by an ex-roommate that she pitied me when I
told her that I would probably never be "married"....and if
I were, it would probably not be for a long time. She
thought me cynical and pessimist for not being able make a
life-long commitment in the space of a ten minute ceremony.
I don't see it as cynical and pessimist at all. Yes, many
times I do feel the need to have someone there, but more oft
than not, I enjoy my space and my time to myself. I enjoy
not having to be in constant communication/association with another
person. Living with a person? Well, that might come and go,
I'm not sure about that. It would cut just as deeply into my
self-time as marriage would.
My mother was moaning the loss of "the family" this weekend.
She brought up how the family unit was disappearing from out
society at a rapid pace. She said that every family is going
to be dysfunctional by the year 2000 because they won't have
a father who works, a mother who stays home and takes care of
the children, and a house with a picket fence. Needless to
say, we got into a huge argument.....she couldn't see how
marriage was not important to make a "family", love is.
Everytime I see my family, like Kris, I get the old Q&A
session. "Who are you seeing?" (Like I HAVE to be seeing
someone). "How serious is it?" "When are you getting
married?"
I'm tired of it. I'm tired of having society pressure me
constantly how I MUST be married or I will be an old maid.
I don't need a piece of paper, a life-long promise, and a
house with a picket fence to be happy, to be committed to a
relationship, to be whole. I don't need lies, because *I*
know I'm not capable of making a commitment for more than a
week down the road, how could I ever be capable of making a
life long commitment.
> You caused my VT to catch fire.
Hahahaha...................<no comment>
kath
|
905.30 | we're looking at this wrong | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Mon Nov 27 1989 12:47 | 22 |
| When we speak of marriage today we are looking at a social
institution that has had it's basics changed. We all speak of "love"
but that is NOT what marriage has traditionally been about. Marriage
is a social contract for the transfer of land and property. It is
the assurance of clan continuation and the glue of profitable family
allegiance. When marriage evolved it had little notion of love as a
means of enduring. It was your duty to your family to make a good
match that would benefit them, not to find personal fulfillment.
No wonder we have so much trouble staying happy in marriage. It is a
custom that no longer fits our societal and personal needs. I don't
believe that people were meant to be loners, we are social animals.
But the social institutions that govern family need to be changed to
fit the world we live in today.
Should love be the basis of a lifelong commitment? Is marriage the
best way to realize that commitment? I don't know. I want to believe
that love has a place in our world and that people can live together
in peace and happiness. We won't be able to do that using tradtional
social customs that no longer fit our lifestyles. Unfortunately, the
words "that's the way we've always done it" carry a lot of weight.
liesl
|
905.31 | This ISN'T meant to sound cynical, sorry! | SSDEVO::GALLUP | put your hand inside the puppet head | Mon Nov 27 1989 21:21 | 38 |
|
"I don't know where to begin
in this world we live in
are we living in love
or are we living in sin?"
"Living in Sin"
Bon Jovi
What a truly moving song, I actually sat down and *listened*
to the words.
I feel the concept of marriage is a product of our society to
allow sex to be "acceptable" between two people.
In ancient (Biblical?) times there were reasons to not have
sex outside of marriage (unwed women with children were
shunned, a woman couldn't support a child without a man
figure, birth control was not safe even if it might be
available in whatever crude form).
I don't feel it applies any longer today to say that two
people we have sex outside of the bonds of matrimony are
"living in sin," but some people still hold to this belief.
The reasons it was a "sin" in ancient times, no longer hold
for today.
It's sad to see our society putting so much emphasis on
marriage when it's really a mere convenience to "giving
blessing to" a union between two people.....to prove it
"acceptable."
kath
|
905.32 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | a day in the park | Wed Nov 29 1989 14:00 | 39 |
| Re .31, and even Jon Bon Jovi got married this past year! :-)
(so he's not "living in sin" anymore; let's hope for his sake
he's "living in love"!) :-)
I agree with you and what's even more discouraging is that laws
still make it beneficial for many women to get married. Laws
put such an importance on marriage that it's hard to ignore.
Another aspect is that it's one thing for a man, such as Kris, to
say that he can see no advantage to himself in getting married.
There probably wouldn't be any advantage to him to get married.
But, most women even today do not make enough money to raise a
child or buy a home on their own, so without a husband they really
can't realize these goals. I know there's more to life than having
a child and a house, but still both can be very nice to have, too,
and I certainly could never have either on my pay alone. Therefore,
I could say that it was still advantageous for me to get married.
Marriage afforded me the financial and emotional support I needed
to be able to have a child and a nice house. It might be nice if
I could have done it alone, but I couldn't and neither can most
women even today. Until all women make as much money as all men
- not just equal pay for equal jobs - but until secretaries make
as much as truck drivers, for example, marriage will not go out
of style because women will need it to get what they want. And
if men want love and loyalty and knowing their kids are theirs,
they'll have to go along with it or go without women. So, I don't
think marriage will dissapear overnight.
Although, I admit I can't relate to the idea of making a lifetime
commitment to somebody and sticking with it even if you're not happy
with them anymore. It seems like unnecessary self-punishment to
me. (and most people, apparently, which is why there are so many
divorces)
I think if men and women really were economically equal then that
would go a long way towards getting rid of marriage.
Lorna
|
905.33 | Some thoughts... | REFINE::STEFANI | Tell me what you want.... | Wed Nov 29 1989 14:44 | 29 |
| re: -.1
� I think if men and women really were economically equal then that
� would go a long way towards getting rid of marriage.
Lorna,
Is that such a good thing? I agree that pay inequities is a serious problem,
one that still exists even though it is starting to get addressed, but equal
pay does not mean the end of marriage. People get married often for reasons
that are uniquely there own, but a woman getting married just to have a kid is
wrong (IMHO).
You marry your spouse, you don't marry a baby manufacturer or a sp*rm donor.
I'm sorry to be so blunt, but my parents, though they love us kids, will always
love eachother first. Granted, society has traditionally scorned women who
had children without the "benefit of marriage", but society has changed
and even though unwed mothers are still viewed differently, women (and men)
have a lot more choices than were available years ago. Adoption, in-vitro
fertilization, surrogate parents, etc.
Something that I'm curious about are women that want to have their own child,
without marrying or even loving the father. I'm not speaking of unexpected
pregnancies, but women who have decided to have a child without being married.
Speaking for myself, I would not want to father a child and not be able to be
part of his family. However, I'm sure that there are many men who feel
differently.
- Larry
|
905.34 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | Got the universe reclining in her hair | Wed Nov 29 1989 15:02 | 48 |
| > <<< Note 905.32 by DZIGN::STHILAIRE "a day in the park" >>>
> to be able to have a child and a nice house. It might be nice if
> I could have done it alone, but I couldn't and neither can most
> women even today. Until all women make as much money as all men
> - not just equal pay for equal jobs - but until secretaries make
> as much as truck drivers, for example, marriage will not go out
> of style because women will need it to get what they want.
I don't find that true anymore today. Most of the women I
know can easily "go at it alone" and do. (But then again,
cost of living in the area you are in plays a major factor).
Also, I don't agree in the least bit with the statement
"until all women make as much money as all men.....until
secretaries make as much as truck drivers." You can never,
nor SHOULD you ever fight for anything more than equal pay
for equal skills, because demanding anything more is
demanding for the inequality to go in favor of women, and
that is dead wrong in my book.
On Good Morning America this morning they surveyed some women
all over the country about the "changing family" and most the
women said that they don't need men any longer to support
them and make a good life for themselves. That they know
that being a single woman is never bad and that you can do
anything and everything that single men can do......and that
includes making a good life for yourself.
If secretaries are not happy in the current pay scale
attributed to secretaries, then Digital offers practically
free schooling to any of their employees, and the secretaries
(and others not happy with their pay) have ample opportunity
to take advantage of this schooling to get themselves into a
position that does pay what they feel they deserve....and a
position they will enjoy.
It will never happen that secretarial pay will skyrocket, and
that should be accepted, and if people want more pay for a
better life, no one but themselves can give them that better
life.
kath
|
905.35 | | BSS::BLAZEK | some kind of angel come inside | Wed Nov 29 1989 15:16 | 19 |
|
Small nit.
Kathy, you have never been a secretary and you have no idea how
hard some of them work. Schooling does not equate hard-workers
does not equate blossoming pay scales. I know many secretaries
who put in far more hours and who do far more work than their
managers and/or the people they support.
It's sort of like saying nurses deserve to make so little money
because they haven't put in as much schooling time as doctors,
yet there's no arguing the fact that it's the nurses and other
non-doctors who do the bulk of the work. Especially the dirty
work, which I believe is what should merit higher pay. And if
anyone has ever been a secretary, or a nurse, they are well-
aware at just how bountiful the dirty work actually is.
Carla
|
905.36 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | a day in the park | Wed Nov 29 1989 15:45 | 44 |
| Re .35, thanks, Carla, for making those points.
Re .34, Kath, you have brought up so many issues that I can dispute
I really don't know where to begin. And, you and I have disagreed
on this so much in both mail and notes that I am reluctant to open
this can of worms again. But, I will say that I am amazed that
you say that most of the women you know are easily going it alone
on their pay. Kath, most of the *men* I know are not easily going
it alone on their pay, nevermind women. I am currently living with
my ex-husband, a DEC software engineer, and another male friend,
a DEC technician. It takes all three of us to meet the mortgage
on my ex-husband's house. Another of my closest friends is a Ph.D.
principal hardware engineer at DEC, (a male), who has custody of
one child. He has been unable to save for a downpayment on a house
in Massachusetts. So, with this in mind, the idea of a secretary
or a waitress or female tech or owning her own home in Massachusetts
is ludricrous. It's difficult for me to believe that the cost of
living in Colorado is so low that a person making say, $23K a yr.
could afford to own their own home, plus raise 1 child and pay for
for daycare. That would really be something. Both woman and child
would be in rags and half starved I would think, to say nothing
about the car she might be driving (maybe a bike with a seat on
back for the kid?).
As far as the comment that any secretary who isn't happy with the
pay scale should just get another job, well that is a very easy
answer to a complex problem. It's like passing a homeless person
on a cold winter night and saying, "Hey, if you don't like the cold
get a job!" Maybe they'd like to, but who knows what individual
circumstances caused them to be where they are right now. For them
to get a job, might be like somebody saying to you, "Hey, Kath,
run for President next time." Yes, there are training programs
at DEC but perhaps the person who is a secretary is not good at
any of the things the programs are for. Maybe there are only 20
openings and 50 people applied and she didn't get accepted. Maybe
she has a problem with that old bugger "low self-esteem." Maybe
she doens't have a high I.Q. and really can't do a higher level
job. Maybe the secretarial pay scale and raises have lagged behind
those of WC 4's, so that she is really making less every year.
Life is complicated. Kath, you really have difficulty understanding
the feelings of those less fortunate than yourself.
Lorna
|
905.37 | to clarify | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | a day in the park | Wed Nov 29 1989 16:12 | 25 |
| re .33, just to clarify on my comments about marriage and children
which you, in turn, commented on. I think that love and the desire
to have children can be two separate issues. It is true that many
people want to have children with someone they love and raise the
children together. I always thought that was ideal myself. But,
I think that, just as two people can love each other and not want
children, that a person can want children even if they don't want
a one on one, long-term love relationship, and I don't see anything
wrong with these people having children if they can afford to care
for them. My point was that most women today still don't earn enough
money to raise children (well) alone. I was not suggesting that
women should marry men they don't love just to have children. I
was trying to suggest that if a woman is in love with a man, and
doesn't want children or more children (as I don't) that she might
be happier to live with the person without getting married. But,
if she wanted children and couldn't afford to raise them alone,
she might want to marry a man she was in love with first, and then
have children. This doesn't mean that she only thought of the man
as a sperm donator or whatever you said, but only that she recognized
that she would need the help of a willing father in order to raise
the kids. Therefore, it would still be advantageous for this woman
to be married.
Lorna
|
905.38 | First hand comment... | BSS::VANFLEET | Living my Possibilities | Wed Nov 29 1989 17:01 | 19 |
| While I'm not trying to dispute anything that has been said here, let
me offer a little in the way of personal experience.
I am a single parent living in Colorado raising a 5 year old. For the
past three years I've worked for Dec starting at $5.75 an hour as a
temp and then moving all the way up to WC2. I'll be going to WC3 in
January. In Colorado a single parent can make it on those wages and if
I'd handled my money a little differently I probably could be driving a
late model car and bought a modest house. Unfortunately circumstances
and legal fees and therapy for my daughter have prevented me from
achieving those goals. I've been in Massachusettes recently for
training and I honestly don't think I could have done that there. The
cost of living is radically different in the two states. I think that
Kathy's and Lorna's perceptions of reality would be quite different were
they to switch places both in job situations and geography.
I now return you to your regularly scheduled discussion.
Nanci
|
905.39 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | am I going to chance, am I going to dance | Wed Nov 29 1989 17:58 | 68 |
|
BTW...I just want to point out that I'm not belittling
secretaries and their work. They are very supportive to me
and to my work, and I feel everyone should be who and what
they want to be.
I could, quite easily have chosen secretarial work as my
vocation, but I chose not to, because it does not interest
me, just as being a doctor did not interest me.
I'd like to make that perfectly clear, okay?
RE: Carla (and general discussion)
> Kathy, you have never been a secretary and you have no idea how
> hard some of them work.
Ah, nit again. Yes I have. I was a secretary for the
engineering faculty for 4 years in college. I know exactly
how hard secretaries work because I worked my butt off as a
secretary--which included many long nights in the lab, and
working during my holidays.
I also work my butt off as an engineer, which includes many
long nights and some weekends, as well.
> I know many secretaries
> who put in far more hours and who do far more work than their
> managers and/or the people they support.
And they should be rewarded for that.....As well as the
people in all other professions (managers included) that work
long, hard hours over and above the call of duty.
There are hard workers in every profession, and they are
sluff-offs in every profession as well.
> It's sort of like saying nurses deserve to make so little money
> because they haven't put in as much schooling time as doctors,
> yet there's no arguing the fact that it's the nurses and other
> non-doctors who do the bulk of the work.
But (don't you hate 'buts'? :-) ) Doctors are the ones that
make life-saving/life-threatening decisions. Nurses and
other non-doctors cannot make those decisions. Many doctors
spend many an hour each day in surgery and/or making
diagnosis and such that, while that might not be hard
PHYSICAL work, it is very hard MENTAL work.
I believe the point in "equal pay of equal skills" in rank,
at least (ie, doctors to nurses; engineers to technicians,
etc) lies in the notion that one party can do the job of the
other, but the reverse is not always true.
Now the question I want to pose........should wages be based
on a skill level like that, or should they be based on an
"amount of work done" level, or a combination of the two?
And isn't this a rathole in this topic? ;-)
kath
|
905.40 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | am I going to chance, am I going to dance | Wed Nov 29 1989 18:19 | 120 |
| > <<< Note 905.36 by DZIGN::STHILAIRE "a day in the park" >>>
> But, I will say that I am amazed that
> you say that most of the women you know are easily going it alone
> on their pay. Kath, most of the *men* I know are not easily going
> it alone on their pay, nevermind women.
Lorna, quite simply you live in Mass, I live in Colorado.
The cost of living is quite different here than it is there.
I stated that cost of living is a major factor...realize that
the downpayment for a house in Colorado can be $500. Realize
that to buy a huge house here, you don't have to spend over
$100K.
Cost of living is a major factor.
> As far as the comment that any secretary who isn't happy with the
> pay scale should just get another job, well that is a very easy
> answer to a complex problem.
I didn't say "get another job", I said it was an OPTION.
Personally, I don't want to run for president, so I won't.
I'm pretty happy in the job I am in right now. Someone that
is unhappy with their pay has the OPTION, through DEC, to
have their education paid to get a job that PAYS more and
that they LIKE. Option....not a requirement.
But if someone in a now paying job decided they don't want to
'not be a secretary', well, then there are consequences to
staying where they are.
Also, I don't advocate low raises for secretaries, nor do I
advocate that they should not be paid more. It is very
unfortunate, and I will fight to give secretaries (and
others) the opportunities for advancement that everyone has (in pay
as well).
But, Lorna...there is a point where a person needs to ACCEPT
that right now, this instant, their pay is NOT going to
double in the job that they are in, and if they DO need/want
more pay, they are the only ones that can do anything about
that.
YOU don't like it, *I* don't like it. But that is a fact
that THAT IS HOW IT IS right now. It is NOT CHANGING,
especially now that ALL raises across the board are being cut
back.
Face it, Lorna.....the fact is that IT IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN
RIGHT NOW.....none of us like that, but it's the truth.
I'm not advocating that it is "right" or "it should be this
way", but that is how it is.
>. Maybe the secretarial pay scale and raises have lagged behind
> those of WC 4's, so that she is really making less every year.
I find that to be awful...that should never be the case,
with secretaries, with ANYONE.
> Life is complicated.
Yes, life is complicated, but life is not going to change at
the snap of a finger, that MUST be realized.
If a person is not happy with what they have, then it is
totally up to them to do something about it. The fact is, no
one is going to do it for them.
> Kath, you really have difficulty understanding
> the feelings of those less fortunate than yourself.
No, Lorna, I don't. You're putting a lot into what I'm
writing. You're saying that I AGREE with this philosophy
that secretaries should be paid very low, which I do not
agree with, I abhore it.
But i accept that you can fight it right now, and how that
our society does something about it...or.....you can actively
do something to better yourself so that you don't have to be
in that position.
And just because I am not a secretary at the moment, just
because I am an engineer, does not mean that I don't
understand and i don't sympathize with this very real
problem.
The facts are there, Lorna. Society will not allow
secretaries to get higher raises because, you see...someone
has to be on the bottom, someone has to be paid low. If not
secretaries, then who do you suggest? It is unfortunate that
you are in that position, but someone needs to be on the
bottom.
Consider this....every secretary, assembler, nurse, etc gets a BIG
raise.....to put them equal with engineers and managers and
doctors and such. Prices of the products must then be raised
to meet those higher salaries, which means everything is more
expensive at the marketplace....which means your big raise in
salary did absolutely nothing for you.
I put to you, who do you propose to place on the bottom of
the wage scale and what jobs should be there?
It's unfortunate, and I hate it as much as you do, but our
society is set up this way......when you snap your fingers it
is not going to change......no one can change your situation
but yourself......to accept the situation means to accept
consequences.
I agree, secretaries, on the average, do a d*mn good job, and
should be rewarded accordingly....I feel they have been
unjustly snubbed, and I abhore that and I fight that.....
but.......just where do they go in the chain? And who goes
on bottom?
kath
|
905.41 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | am I going to chance, am I going to dance | Wed Nov 29 1989 18:23 | 22 |
| > <<< Note 905.38 by BSS::VANFLEET "Living my Possibilities" >>>
> cost of living is radically different in the two states. I think that
> Kathy's and Lorna's perceptions of reality would be quite different were
> they to switch places both in job situations and geography.
Yes, Nanci...I agree totally. I know that I could not drive
the car I do, and live in the house that I do, if I lived in
Mass. I know that I would be very near the poverty level in
Mass on my current salary as an engineer.
New England and California are very different, cost of living
wise, than the rest of the US (I suppose I could throw
Florida in there too, it's expensive).
Unfortunately, the jobs, especially within DEC, are where the
cost of living is the highest.
kath
|
905.42 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | whatsa Gort? | Thu Nov 30 1989 07:13 | 17 |
| So Lorna as I understand it you would have every one making $10.00 an hour
regardless what their job might be?
If that were true where would the drive to better oneself come from? Who would
do the so called dirty jobs like for example trash collectors? Around here they
make $15+ per hour if the same person could make the same amount turning as
a sec or exec, Who would perform these other less desirable jobs?
And I hereby place on record that I fully believe that any male or female
doing the same job at the same performance level and experience, should
recieve equal pay. FWIW- I know several women doing my same job that make
as much and in cases more than I do although this is not always true in other
companys.
Why not do something about it instead of just complaining about it?
-j
P.S. My neighbors wife IS a trash collector(sanitation eng as she likes to be
called) and makes more hourly than I do.
|
905.43 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | a day in the park | Thu Nov 30 1989 10:03 | 33 |
| Re .42, you know you amaze me! When did I ever say that everybody
should make $10.00 an hr.! I do not think that, and I have never
at any time in my entire 40 yrs. of being alive voiced that opinion
to anybody or written it in notes during the 3 1/2 yrs. I have been
noting! Are there any other opinions you would like to pretend that
I have, and pass along to others? I'm sure it would be quite
interesting to see what you come up with. Next thing I know you'll
be telling people I'm a Communist spy from Cuba. Ya gotta get the
facts straight, here! This is human_relations, not the Enquirer!
We're not reading this in line at the grocery store, unless i'm
terribly confused.
Saying the equal pay for equal work is honky-dory until you take
into consideration that all jobs that have been traditionally done
by males are high paid jobs and all jobs traditionally done by women
are low paid jobs. THis happened because the labor of women was
not valued as highly as the labor of men in this white, male dominated
society. Even today the only way women can make as much money as
men is by doing a job traditionally done by men. The roles
traditionally done by women such as caring for children, the elderly,
sick people, serving food, and doing secretarial chores are still
undervalued by this society.
I would gladly work as trash collector for $15. an hour, but I don't
think I could do a good job because I am very small and couldn't
lift heavy things. Very few men, however, are 5'1" and weigh 95
lbs. So, most men could take the trash collector job instead of
my secretarial job and make 5 bucks more an hour.
Have a nice day,
Lorna
|
905.44 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | a day in the park | Thu Nov 30 1989 10:20 | 35 |
| Re Kath, first of all, no hard feelings, anyone who likes Axl Rose
can't be all bad! :-)
As far as the nurses vs doctors argument goes, I think nurses do
wind up making life and death decisions. Sometimes in the absence
of doctors and sometimes simply through the care they give. If
they make a mistake a person can die. When it is considered that
most RN's today have master's degrees (5 yrs. college) and their
pay is compared with the astronomical pay of doctors, it really
is not fair in my mind that such a huge indescrepancy exists. Doctors
and lawyers have been elevated to the level of gods in our society
and paid fortunes and I consider a crime.
Kath, as far as secretarial pay goes I think that a good part of
the problem is that secretaries are placed lower on the ladder than
they should be. I don't think they belong on the bottom. I think
the main reason they are on the bottom is that most of them are
women. I'm not advocating that secretaries be elevated to the status
of engineers. (When you're making peanuts even a little more money
helps.)
I consider secretarial pay and my personal career to be two different
issues. That is why I am upset when I complain about sec. pay and
people only tell me that I should get a "better" job. That is a
different issue, and not something I have time to go into here.
I do appreciate your comments in support of secretaries.
Sorry for the rathole. Back to the subject:
No one should get married before the age of 25, and not before living
with the other person for at least 2 yrs. first. There, now that
issue is settled!
Lorna
|
905.45 | Finally back on the subject! | JULIET::BOGLE_AN | | Tue Dec 05 1989 18:17 | 17 |
| My husband and I met in July and were married in October. We are
pleasingly happy and content. We have both had other lengthy
relationships, in fact, I have been married previously.
My first husband I lived with for four years, married him, and two
years later divorced him. A total of 6.5 years or so. We knew
each other a long time before we married and it still didn't work.
I don't think it really matters how long you know someone before
marriage. Sometimes being married, forces you to stick it out rather
than throw in the towel. It's easier to walk out when you are just
living together. Either way, there is a period of time of adjustment
when you are getting to know each others likes and dislikes.
If your heart feels good, then do it. BUT, like anything else,
don't be stupid. Just keep your eyes open.
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905.46 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | don't be dramatic | Wed Dec 06 1989 11:30 | 16 |
| Re .45, I know there are no set rules that always work for everybody.
Everyone has to make their own choices based on their own experience,
but when I read something like what you wrote "My husband and I
met in July and were married in October. We are pleasingly happy
and content.", it really doesn't seem to me to be proof of anything.
I mean, I was ecstatic two months after my marriage, too, but we
later went on to get a divorce after 12 1/2 yrs. If you said that
you got married two months after meeting, and now 15 yrs. later
you are both very happy and still in love and would do it again
tomorrow, then I'd say, "Wow, it worked for them! So, that proves
it can work sometimes!" But, being happy after only 2 months of
marriage doesn't prove anything to me. I mean, who isn't? (I suppose
a few people aren't.) Oh, well. Good luck. Hope it works out.
Lorna
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905.47 | | BSS::BLAZEK | all the sins and secrets never cried | Wed Dec 06 1989 12:30 | 17 |
|
There was an interesting panel on the Oprah Winfrey show a few
days ago: Newlyweds who are having serious marital problems.
Most were young couples who had known each other for years but
after several months of marriage were looking for other lovers
and/or outside diversions because their spouse wasn't living up
to their expectations.
The linking thread that I saw in all the couples was a rampant
immature attitude towards working together. I don't think it
has anything to do with knowing someone for six months or six
years. If you're enthusiastic to work out your problems, your
success rate is going to catapult past those who would rather
hide their head in the sand ... in someone else's sandbox.
Carla
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905.48 | Some people like to argue! | JULIET::BOGLE_AN | | Tue Dec 12 1989 15:19 | 19 |
| RE: .46 - LORNA, ",it really doesn't seem to me to be proof of
anything."
I don't think anyone is trying to "prove" anything here. That
is why all I said about my current marriage is we are pleasingly
happy and content. No one but God knows what our future holds.
The example that I used the most was my first marriage because
that is where I had the most experience to share.
My sister and her husband knew each other 3 months and married.
Nine years later they are still married. A co-worker here, knew
her husband 3 months and married. They had it anulled a week later.
My parents knew each other about 6 months, married, and divorced
19 years later. I don't think it really matters either.
I like reply .47: "If you're enthusiastic to work out your problems,
your success rate is going to catapult past those who .............
That I feel is the key to ANY successful relationship. Putting
in 100% effort, and from BOTH SIDES. One person can't keep it
together if the other won't.
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