T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1061.1 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Thu Aug 16 1990 19:37 | 11 |
| Although I never went to pre-martial couseling myself, I have a
sister who did. She claimed it was very benificail to the marriage,
giving a realistic look at marriage and what to expect of it, vs.
what it appears to be.
After having had 2 marriages in my past I have every intention of
getting it along with my prospective spouse when/if I ever decide
to try for it again. That is if I don't end up in the same situation
you are in.
Skip
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1061.2 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Fri Aug 17 1990 09:54 | 5 |
| Can lead the horse to water, but if he isn't in the drinking mood.
Thats life. And I don't know if making a demand to go prior to marriage
would do any good. He may resent you for making him do so. Tough call.
George
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1061.3 | | NETMAN::HUTCHINS | Did someone say ICE CREAM? | Fri Aug 17 1990 10:30 | 10 |
| I would ask him why he refuses to go to counselling. If it's important
to you and you've had difficulties concerning how he's handled the
situation with his children, I'd definitely ask him.
Do you feel that you can talk easily with him about issues that concern
you, or do you feel that counselling could help open up the lines of
communication.
Judi
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1061.4 | | ASDS::BARLOW | | Fri Aug 17 1990 11:02 | 17 |
|
I never had premarital counselling but I never felt the need. I don't
think that counselling, of any type, can ever hurt. Perhaps you could
go yourself. If you are concerned about the relationship, it might
help to sort out your concerns. I feel that I must tell you to really
evaluate why you are marrying a man who won't discuss problems and
doesn't seem to have handled his "past situations" well. I don't know
him at all, but if sounds like he has a problem taking responsibility
for himself. I'm also not sure of your beliefs, but perhaps you should
think about living with him before you are married. If he won't take
responsibility for his children, past relationships or present
relationship, then how would he be with day-to-day things, like
housework? I hope I haven't upset you. Your note just set off warning
flags in my head. Good Luck!
Rachael
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1061.5 | ? | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Fri Aug 17 1990 12:36 | 21 |
| Why would you like to marry a person that has his life in such a mess?
I have been married many years but I do consider Marriage a
"sacrament", something that cannot be broken. These days marriages are
just mere contracts, that when it does not work we break it and get a
new one, with that fragility in mind, how can a marriage last? but the
real problem is not the marriage itself, but the CHILDREN who are born
out of those marriages and find themselves drifting from parent to
parent or alone... those kids grow up to continue that type of vicious
circle, where happiness is so elusive as to be almost non-existent.
Marriage is a sacrament and should be given the upmost respect and
sacrifice. I believe that in the Catholics have a minimum of 6 months
of counseling preparation to the marriage and it is attended by both,
the bride and groom, and at the least hint of "fragility" or
uncertainty, the marriage does not take place... I believe that is why
catholic families have long marriages... they do put a lot of effort in
the success of their marriages.
I would advise you to think very seriously BEFORE you get married, in
putting things in order and in the right perspective. Only then you
will have some assurance that your marriage will last and it will have
a solid base in which to create a family worthy of having, a family
to be proud of.
|
1061.6 | i don't value them so much | DEC25::BERRY | UNDER-ACHIEVER and PROUD of it, MAN! | Mon Aug 20 1990 03:20 | 7 |
|
I went to such a program.... in the Air Force.
I divorced the _____ in 1986!
Like living with someone, they don't guarantee anything.
|
1061.7 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Mon Aug 20 1990 13:50 | 3 |
| After reading alot of this note and others like it, I still feel that
we are part if that 'me first, and screw you' generation. And the kids
are always the brunt of the stick.
|
1061.8 | Nothing is certain in this life! | HAMPS::LUCKHURST_B | | Tue Aug 21 1990 10:02 | 30 |
| Counselling can do you no harm - even if you go alone. I was a
Marriage Guidance Counsellor for a few years and say many people,
often (for some reason) the woman would come alone first, but after
a few weeks the man very often started to come along too, often
don't say too much at first, but when they do open up, it's really
great. I'd say, go along, just to talk to someone completely impartial
will help you sort out your feelings - and that can only be good.
re .5 - I think most people believe their marriage will last when
they enter into it and I most definately do not believe that people
just move on without really trying to get their marriage sorted
out - I have witnessed the pain and sorrow of people desperately
wanting to be happy again - but eventually have decided to part
- it is not easy, believe me.
As for waiting until you are absolutely sure your marriage will
survive - no-one can be sure of this - we fall in love, we marry,
we want to stay happy - sometimes it just doesn't happen.
I agree, children often suffer, but when a marriage breaks down,
two caring parents can ensure that the children are helped through
this traumatic time.
I was divorced 13 years ago when my son was 3 yrs old - he is now
a fine, well balanced young man of 16 and has no hang ups about
being from a 'one parent family'.
Just my feelings on the subject!
Brenda
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1061.9 | the distant past | PARITY::R_ELWELL | Dirty old men need love, too. | Tue Aug 21 1990 13:31 | 3 |
| All I can say is, it would have helped me..........28 years ago....
....Bob
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1061.10 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Wed Aug 22 1990 00:02 | 27 |
| Janiez,
> Any opinions?
I agree with .4 by BARLOW
> ... I feel that I must tell you to really
> evaluate why you are marrying a man who won't discuss problems ..
Not quite "to evaluate why you" but to clarify your own
feelings and wants. If he is mad enough about you to
marry you and live with you the rest of his life, popping
off to a few sessions is no big deal.
It is no joy to live with people who ONLY see the view
through their own windshield.
If your thinking of going by yourself, go for it! Look at
the ratio one can guesstimate:
$ few-hundred dollars + few hours : 40 years of marriage
ps. I think if I had done this, the first few years of my
marriage would have been a lot more fun. NOW I realize
my thoughts and needs were terriby fuzzy to me ... would
have been better to clarify them.
Meigs -- who will be perfect at 70 -- :)
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1061.11 | Cant stop the inevitable | AKOV14::SOBELL | | Thu Aug 23 1990 13:42 | 11 |
| There are 2 priorities :
First, a metaphor -
Alchemists never did make gold from straw and you wont make
granite out of mud. There better be a solid base first!
Second Priority
The councilor is MUCH more important than the council. Check out
credentials. Better to play the odds with a councilor with
advanced degrees in the field than a local neighborhood priest,
learning the ropes, by giving precana classes once a week
|
1061.12 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Occam's razor is a 2-edged sword | Thu Aug 23 1990 15:11 | 7 |
| There's a problem with metaphors -- they don't always hold up well.
You're right, you can't make granite out of mud. But you can make
brick, porcelein, or if you're real clever reinforced concrete -- which
is a lot stronger than granite.
Jon
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1061.13 | | ORMAZD::REINBOLD | | Fri Sep 14 1990 20:37 | 25 |
| I realize this reply is a little late...I've been on vacation,and am just now
trying to catch up on notes.
Personally, I don't think I'd want to marry someone who refused counseling.
If a man isn't dealing with something well, why won't he try to get some help
to deal with it? Marriage isn't always easy - things don't always go smoothly.
If a man won't go to counseling, then how will he deal with problems in a
marriage? How is he going to make something better if he won't WORK on making
it better?
There are a lot of people who admit they have problems, but they either lay
the "blame" on someone else, or whine about it -- without DOING anything to
improve things. Problems generally don't get better by themselves. Life and
marriage takes work. Often one of the most effective means of working on
something is to get counselling.
We half-heartedly went to counselling a few times before we got married.
Nothing changed. After about a year and a half of marriage we almost split
up, went to counselling in desperation, really placed our faith in the
counsellor, in the marriage, and in each other, and the relationship is better
and stronger than ever.
The value of counselling is in the counsellor and in the effort you put into
achieving results. If my partner refused to go with me, I'd go alone, and I
would take a real long look at how he (the partner) deals with problems.
|
1061.14 | | QUIVER::STEFANI | Turn it on again | Sat Sep 15 1990 00:28 | 16 |
| Something can also be said for looking for problems that don't truly
exist. Counseling for the sake of counseling seems pointless. Two
people that have open communication and talk about what they each
expect out of the marriage, can probably forgo the pre-marital
counseling. Not wanting to get "deep and personal" with an outsider
does not necessarily mean the person lacks the ability or desire to
deal with problems. It may just mean that they prefer keeping personal
trials between the couple. Nothing wrong with that...
When it comes my "turn" to settle down, I hope to find a program where
my fiance' and I can talk to young married couples and discuss some of
the things that will come up after the honeymoon. By sharing
experiences, we can learn to better handle situations when/if they
arrive.
- Larry
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