T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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509.1 | How do YOU spell "happily married?" L-U-C-K-Y !!! | DOOLIN::HNELSON | Evolution in action | Wed Sep 19 1990 19:19 | 14 |
| I dated a long succession of extremely high-powered women, all of whom
definitely had six-digit potential. By and large they were athletic,
too, given my fantasy: "Hey, the kids have gone down to the park, what
say we go out to the driveway and play one-on-one [basketball]?" Most
were Jewish.
I married a non-athletic shiksa [sp? i.e. non-Jew] who was NOT an
athletic and was barely making a living. Why? Because we spent about
thirty evenings together and I suddenly realized that I had enjoyed
every single one of them! Now we've been married six years, and I've
enjoyed about 2200 evenings!! [And she's tripled (nearly) her income
and we play tennis a couple times a week!]
- Hoyt
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509.2 | But...hey...why do WOMEN marry? | FRAMBO::LIESENBERG | Take a rest, Sisyphus! | Thu Sep 20 1990 06:32 | 65 |
| Why do "men" marry? I can only talk for myself, and I guess the
reasons for marriage are not dependent on the gender, but on the
emotional scenario of each individual at one moment in time...
As for myself...well, love is a pretty good reason. When you feel
as attracted to a person as you've never felt to anyone before,
that's the time when the prospect of sharing your whole life with
one person thrills you thoroughly... And for a person "blowing"
your mind, it takes a lot more than "love at first sight". In my
case, good looks alone don't keep me interested for more than a few
days, and for that it must be an awesome good-looking woman. No,
it's discovering that each new side you discover in soul-to-soul
conversation fascinates you, it's the feeling you can tell
everything, open up and be yourself. When the mask of the first
encounters starts to fall, and it feels better and better. Feeling
totally accepted, and realizing you love more the more sincere your
partner is, being open and getting recognition in return...talking
about experiences, being able to talk about all your deepest
yearnings, your fears...that's the platform for a total "shock to
my system"...
I've seen it quite often that women seem to be attracted to the
well-mannered, neatly dressed and humorous young engineer. They
picture someone who's always doing meaningful cultural things and
taking them to some fine dinner; but then they look quite surprised
when I suddenly put on my favourite dungarees, enjoy a simple bread
and cheese dinner just as much as yesterday's french cuisine and
wrestle around with my favourite dog on the lawn, kissing him on
the snout for good measure. What a shock to them! Yes, there aren't
many women around a man can really feel REAL with...I mean, there
aren't many men one can be open and be a close friend with, too,
I'm not criticizing women!
Running on the edge of falling for stereotype-rubbish, my
experience seems to indicate that many women have quite rigid ideas
of how a husband is supposed to be, and being *always* reliable is
one of the most important ones. When the man lets the little kid or
the funny lunatic in him show, they view it as suspect and try to
change that. Women often look at us guys a bit like at houses, they
look at the "framework" and analyze what they could make of us with
some heavy working and renovating...they are aware that they have
normally more power in a relationship, and use it to discipline the
man. Ah, but that's setting the path for marital disaster...
Oh well, I'm drifiting from the original subject...
Why do men marry? At least, the first time, when they are young and
dumb (uh-oh, this sounds like poor 22-year old Paul..), they
marry because they are crazily and deeply in love. No time for
analyzing, no need for questioning. It's just a decision based on
faith alone.
Next time, I'd be a wiser man. The reasons would be...love,
honesty, tolerance, realizing the relation is the platform for my
inner growth, knowing that person will always listen to everything
I have to say, knowing that the other persons feelings will always
enrich me. Somebody who realizes that giving me free room and
accepting all parts of my personality would be the things that
will keep the fire burning.
And if you ever happen to see a poor young chap heading for the
church with that benighted, dumb smile on his face...TALK to him!
But it won't help...
...Paul
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509.3 | logical | TMCUK2::NAIK | Man with the Eastern Charm | Thu Sep 20 1990 07:52 | 4 |
| I married 16 years ago. It was a logical step after 5 years of romance
and courtship.
girish
|
509.4 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Thu Sep 20 1990 10:01 | 2 |
| Some marry the woman because she's pregnant.
Seems like the honorable thing to do...
|
509.5 | There's no magic formula... | FRAMBO::LIESENBERG | Take a rest, Sisyphus! | Thu Sep 20 1990 10:27 | 19 |
| re. .4:
Yes, a friend of mine who was a randy rascal pupped one of his
innumerable summer flirts when he was 19...Spanish macho pride (and
the fact that the girl was from an extremely wealthy family in Norway)
dictated marrying as the only honourable action. Although I was a
teenager myself, I was absolutely sure that that would be a terrible
disaster.
And you know what? They have four (!) daughters right now, and he has
developed into one of the nicest and tenderest persons I know since
then, even though he was the ultimate swine back then. His marriage
is rock-solid, it seems.
Jeez, life is odd. Some of the marriages that seem absolutely perfect
run out of energy somewhere along the way, and some of the ones that
seem to be born in desperation and benightment grow and become
seemingly indestructible.
It just shows there is not ONE correct reason for marrying. Love gives
no reasons, and it never gives a guarantee...
...Paul
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509.6 | | TLE::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Thu Sep 20 1990 11:48 | 8 |
|
I wonder what the similarities/differences are when two men decide to
become life partners. I can't really speak to it, since I've always
been single. I just wonder how much gender and gender roles play into
it.
--Ger
|
509.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Sep 20 1990 12:12 | 12 |
| ... or two women. I once had a long talk with a lesbian woman I know who had
married her partner, and I was struck by how similar her experiences and
emotions were to those I had experienced in heterosexual relationships. It
showed me that there's really not a lot of differences there, and that men
and women really go through much the same thing when choosing a life partner.
I think too often we assume that there must be something unusual or different
about how "men" think from how "women" think, and that these assumptions
are usually invalid or just a result of social conditioning. We're more
alike than many people would think.
Steve
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509.9 | | IAMOK::MITCHELL | Mama's got a brand new toy | Thu Sep 20 1990 13:16 | 7 |
|
re .8
Amen !
|
509.10 | Not suprised | EXPRES::GILMAN | | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:30 | 3 |
| re .7 I have long thought that a romantic relationship involved the
same emotions whether it was man/woman, man/man, woman/woman.
|
509.11 | some figures, some questions... | FRAMBO::LIESENBERG | Just order a drink, Tantalus! | Fri Sep 21 1990 08:43 | 36 |
|
I won't dispute that the feelings in those relationships can be the
same as in a hetereosexual relationship, the fact is just that they can
NOT marry..."living together" and "marrying" aren't the same thing, and
the subject was why men decide to *marry*. Why sealing your feelings with a
certificate? What triggers this decision?
It's a question that in my opinion is taken a bit too lightly, which
explains the stunning figures...33% of all couples that marry for the
first time get divorced, 50% if they give it a second try (which REALLY
surprises me...), and, the most impressing fact: after 8 years of
marriage, 80% of all women would NOT marry the same man again, but
surprisingly only 20% of the men said they wouldn't marry the same
woman again after the same time. Really impressing (ah, those figures
are for Germany, I don't expect US ones to be too different, though...)
The reason for divorce? In most cases, the inability to communicate in
time. Seems that few persons value the ability to communicate at the
beginning of a relationship, or when it comes to make up their mind
about marriage.
Again, why do men marry? Ask 100 men that are about to marry, and 90 of
them will mumble things like "...logical thing to do...", "...We've
been together for such a long time...", etc, as if they would succumb to
some external pressure, just showing they don't give it too much
thoughts.
An enquiry out of pure curiosity to all married or divorced co-noters:
Who raised the question of marriage, she or he? And what lead to the
decision?
In my case, my wife who's-about-to-move-out raised the question
initially, and, although I remember I had a shadow of a doubt, I was
all for it then. She asked first, but from then on I took over as it
had been my decision.
So after this reply, the score of asking for someone's hand is:
United Women of the World - 1
Puzzled Chaps on Earth - 0
...Paul
|
509.12 | | SALEM::KUPTON | Red Sox...Don't Let Me Down | Fri Sep 21 1990 09:08 | 14 |
| I met my wife on Christmas eve 17 years ago. She corrected the way I
said a word. (She was a Literary Criticism major/English and ED minors)
I defended myself and she I didn't have to but people's perception of
me would be different if I corrected my misused English. We argued and
laughed and she broke a date on New Years Eve to just sit a home with
me. We CLICKED!!!! She prodded me to get my degree at night and make
more of myself than I ever would have without her. We decided that we
always wanted to be together and we've been married for 16 years.
We're still best friends.....
Ken
|
509.13 | Male instigation.. | SHAPES::SMITHS1 | | Fri Sep 21 1990 09:54 | 19 |
|
Re: .11 - who instigated the question of marriage?
My husband presented me with a beautiful diamond ring one night and
said "This is yours if you'll marry me". It was a total (but lovely!)
surprise to me. The reason being that he had been engaged before to a
girl who, along with her parents, pressured him in to getting engaged
and the eventual split was fairly messy. So, although I had hoped that
we would get married one day, I had never mentioned it as I thought maybe
for him it would be "once bitten, twice shy".
When we went round to tell his parents his mum took him to one side
(she told me a few months later) and said "Are you really sure this
time?" and he said "Mum, this time it was *my* decision - no pressure".
That said it all really!
Sam
|
509.14 | My reason | MAMTS3::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Fri Sep 21 1990 10:03 | 10 |
| I got married because I fell madlessly in love with my wife and we
shared alot of the same values with one another. The basic premise
that God and family are important, and if these are looked after,
everything else will fall into place. Well, 5 years and 2 living
children later, we are still crazy about one another.
Peace,
Mike
|
509.15 | Ward, June, Wally and the Beaver | HANNAH::MODICA | | Fri Sep 21 1990 10:14 | 18 |
|
Mike Z. really said it all.
For me, there really wasn't any specific reason. On our first
date, everything just felt right! We felt as if we'd known each other
for months/years. It was actually kinda strange. And Lynn wasn't the
so-called girl of my dreams. I always wanted to marry a brunette
with mediteranean features. Lynn is blonde, and worst of all,
came from New York.
Now, fourteen years later, we still have a fantastic marriage.
The two dreaded white-males (ages 1 & 3) we have cut into our time together
but we still relish all the moments we have.
An aside, while dating, some people suggested we were simply not
right for each other, at all. Glad I didn't listen.
Hank
|
509.16 | | FORTY2::BOYES | Les still has his terrible fear of chives! | Fri Sep 21 1990 10:50 | 3 |
| Re: 11 The divorce rate is ~66% in the U.S., twice as high as Germany or the U.K
Mark (who can't contribute much else to this topic *sigh*)
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509.17 | | TLE::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Fri Sep 21 1990 11:20 | 21 |
|
> I won't dispute that the feelings in those relationships can be the
> same as in a hetereosexual relationship, the fact is just that they can
> NOT marry..."living together" and "marrying" aren't the same thing, and
> the subject was why men decide to *marry*. Why sealing your feelings with a
> certificate? What triggers this decision?
You are correct. We gay people are not allowed to legally marry each other.
However, we are allowed to promise to spend the rest of our lives
together in a monogamous relationship. Also, increasingly these days,
same-sex couples are going through "commitment ceremonies," sometimes
sanctioned by certain churches. At least in that respect,
there are more similarities than differences.
No?
Even though we are not allowed to marry each other by state laws, our
decisions to enter life-long partnerships aren't taken lightly.
--Ger
|
509.18 | | CSS::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Fri Sep 21 1990 13:53 | 22 |
| My wife an I married 20 years ago. She was almost 19, I was just short
of 22. I had dated may girls (not too many women) with not too much
luck. My wife and I had known each other for 2 years prior to us
dating. I dated many of her friends and even a cousin who was infatuated
with me thou 4 years younger than me.
I guess I finally came to realize what I really wanted was a happy
relationship as opposed to a really beautiful woman or an airhead (I
had dated some of each). My wife knew the 1st time she met me that she
would marry me!
We married and moved to NH. Our 1st year went down hill. My wife
says I lost interest (sort of). We survived until our next big crisis;
our twin girls died (both) at birth after 4 years of marriage.
Our marriage survived because we focused ourselves in a different
direction, our new land and house. Our sons came along and things got
better.
We do not have an all encompassing romantic relationship. It is
comfortable. We are friends besides man and wife. This is a key. Bad
times WILL surely come as will good. Your expectations of life and
marraige and your common goals will go a long way.
After 20 years
Steve
|
509.19 | I found a needle (gold mine) in a haystack ! | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Sat Sep 22 1990 08:16 | 47 |
| Good topic ! I'm on my 3rd (and LAST !) marriage. Goldy Locks
ain't got a thing on me ... 8^).
When I married the first time I was 19, fresh out of high school,
married my high school sweetheart of 3 STEADY years ! She had
dated a lot before me, I had dated very little. Call it puppy
love gone haywire. This marriage ended shortly after I found out
I wasn't the father of our daughter. I'm a good sport, but gimme
a break ... we divorced after 3 years ...
I think I got married the 2nd time because I just felt better being
married. There never was the "click" I felt before. This union
was more sexual than anything else, but that won't keep you happy
in the long haul, I guarantee it. My emotions and feeling went to
zero eventually. And after our son (2 yrs) died following open
heart surgery, I called it quits. By then the only thing we were
good at was p*ssing each other off - it had got to be an art by
then. We divorced after 6 years ...
Enough of the doom and gloom ! I found my "soul mate" totally by
accident. We were both married (unhappily) and worked together
everyday. We had good conversation, shared a lot of common ideas
but not all. But the main thing is, we started as FRIENDS. No
secrets. As luck would have it (and not all of it good) our paths
drifted toward each other after 3 years of friendship. We've been
married over 2 years - we have a 14 year old son (hers by previous
marriage, ours from here on out).
I married her because:
A> She let me be myself, no games, no "hoops" to jump through
in order to please her. I can be honest, with no repercussions.
B> I can trust her. We've both been through some lousy relationships
so we know when we've got a good thing.
C> She doesn't try to "mother" me.
D> We can always talk things out. We know that we'll argue sometimes,
but that doesn't mean we love each other any less. Besides, making
can be a lot of fun too.
E> We enjoy each other's company. The idea of having his/her rocking
chairs on the front porch when we're 80 sounds great. 'Course
I plan to have her siting with me in one of 'em ! ;^)
F> She's a beautiful person - mentally, physically, you name it !
I love her ways and it would kill me not to have her ... soul
mates.
Scary ...
|
509.20 | | FSTVAX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Tue Oct 09 1990 09:12 | 28 |
| I was 22 when I married Peggy in 1963. She was 24.
I was a sailor. She was a fundamentalist preacher's daughter.
I was a loner. And alone. And I decided I'd like to "settle down".
I met her in a bar (is there a story there?) with her friends. Two
months later we were married. Two years later we were divorced.
We re-married after two more years (1966)...and never were really happy. I
married her the second time because she said she loved me and needed me
(though it was she who got the divorce) and I needed to be loved and
needed. And besides, we had one child, and didn't she need a daddy?
Several times the marriage nearly ended, but it wasn't until 1988 that
I finally had the guts to jump ship. (see mennotes #224)
I met Brenda in SINGLES shortly after my divorce. She and I became
close friends over the network and telephone for six months before we
actually met.
We clicked immediately.
My decision to marry her was as much one of intellect as of the heart.
I've never been happier!
tony
|
509.21 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | No artificial sweeteners | Tue Oct 09 1990 10:27 | 1 |
| Congrats!
|