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Conference turris::womannotes-v3

Title:Topics of Interest to Women
Notice:V3 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1078
Total number of notes:52352

546.0. "POPPING THE QUESTION" by CUPMK::DROWNS (this has been a recording) Tue Nov 20 1990 13:41



How many of you woman think it's acceptable for a woman to propose to a man?


How many of you have done it?


Why/why not?


bonnie


T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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546.1ASDS::BARLOWMe for MA governor!!!Tue Nov 20 1990 14:0713
    
    Hmm, good question. I think that it depends on the relationship.
    If your SO won't be put off, then why not?  I do, however, think
    that it would take a special kind of man to deal with that situation.
    I think that most men, even today, would feel un-manly.  (Just as I
    think most women would still prefer to be asked than to ask.)
    If you and your SO are these special people then go for it!  Does
    this mean that you should buy him an engagement ring?  I never
    did think it was really fair for only women to get engagement rings.
    
    Good luck!
    Rachael
    
546.2The question isn't "why" but "why not"?TLE::D_CARROLLHakuna MatataTue Nov 20 1990 14:089
    Of course it's okay.
    
    Why wouldn't it be?
    
    I've never asked someone to marry me, but I have asked people to "go
    out" with me (in the parlance of the day, "go out" meant "have a
    serious monogamous relationship", not "go on a date".)  So?
    
    D!
546.3VALKYR::RUSTTue Nov 20 1990 14:1121
    Seems to me the point is whether the person to whom one is proposing
    thinks it's acceptable... ;-)
    
    Acceptable to me? Definitely. Acceptable to society-as-I-know-it? Yes.
    To all societies/subgroups/people? Clearly not. Do I think it should be
    acceptable to all? Yes. Do I expect this to happen any time soon? Nope.
    
    I don't see any reason why a woman shouldn't propose ("Propose what?"
    someone asked innocently) marriage, or dinner-and-a-movie, or sex, or
    anything else. I do think those who propose need to be prepared to
    accept rejection gracefully (or, for that matter, to accept acceptance
    gracefully, sometimes a harder task!).
    
    As for personal experience, I did (more or less) propose marriage to my
    now-ex-husband, and he accepted. Why did I do it? Seemed like a good
    idea at the time, and I simply couldn't stand waiting to see if he was
    going to ask. [Although subsequent events indicated that perhaps it
    wasn't the best idea I ever had, I don't blame our problems on my doing
    the asking! ;-)] 
    
    -b
546.4I know, I'm weird.ESIS::GALLUPCherish the certainty of nowTue Nov 20 1990 14:2613
    
    
    
    I can't say that I've ever proposed to someone, but I ask people out
    all the time and I have no qualms about it at all.
    
    If a guy that I ask out would be "put off" by being asked out by a 
    woman, then he's not the type of guy that I would want to be dating
    anyway, so it's no big deal.
    
    I would expect nothing less from a person that I would propose to.
    
    kath
546.5IE0010::MALINGWorking in a window wonderlandTue Nov 20 1990 14:335
    I guess my husband initially popped the question to me and I said let's
    wait and see.  After several years of living together I was the one who
    brought it up again.  He didn't object at all!
    
    Mary
546.6what, you're not going to unless s/he asks?DECWET::JWHITEthe company of intelligent womenTue Nov 20 1990 14:544
    
    the whole idea of one person asking another person to marry them
    seems weird to me. isn't it kind of, like, a *mutual* decision?
    
546.7CADSE::KHERTue Nov 20 1990 14:574
    what joe said. I thought you have a "shall _we_ marry" kind of
    discussion. I thought only people in movies propose and expect a
    yes/no answer
    manisha
546.8who was 1st?SUBWAY::FORSYTHLAFALOTTue Nov 20 1990 15:047
    Yes, I agree there is a "do WE want to marry discussion" (usually) but
    *someone* has to be the first to talk about it i.e. "How would you like
    to get married?"  (Not quite as romantic as "Will you marry me?" but
    still a proposal - of a marriage discussion at the very least!)
    
    my $.02
    
546.92 who sorta asked for themselvesFRAGLE::WASKOMTue Nov 20 1990 16:2814
    As I recall, about 19 years ago I asked my now ex "We are planning on
    getting married, aren't we?"  He replied in the affirmative, and things
    kinda rolled on from there.  So I guess I asked him, kinda.  He told me
    later he'd been planning on asking me in a couple of weeks, at a
    particular event/occasion.  I just got too impatient to wait.  
    
    My mom didn't exactly get "asked" either.  She had *much* younger
    siblings (14 years younger) and while her parents were arguing about
    how to discipline the younger kids, my dad turned to her and said "We
    aren't going to let our kids hear these discussions," or words to that
    effect.  Apparently that was her proposal, as she used it as the
    opening for "We are getting married first, aren't we?" discussions.
    
    Alison 
546.10HENRYY::HASLAM_BACreativity UnlimitedTue Nov 20 1990 18:066
    Yes.
    
    Yes.  He wasn't comfortable with me doing the asking, so refused
    until he did the asking.
    
    Barb
546.11Shock him...Thrill himWR2FOR::COSTELLO_KEStill Awaiting Mr. Mojo Risin'Tue Nov 20 1990 23:4112
    Personally I think it would be kind of neat to kneel in a restaurant in
    front of the man I love, pull one single red rose from behd my back,
    take his hand in mine and say, "Would you spend the rest of your life
    making me the happiest and luckiest woman alive...Would
    you...sigh...marry me?"
    
    Then again it'd be pretty darn neat to have someone do that for me too. 
    I kinda like to live on the edge, so's if I felt like doin' it, and I
    truly thought we were both ready to discuss it, sure why not.
    
    Kel
    
546.12I sorta like the old traditions at times...BIGRED::GALEOkay, I'll settle for 12/11/90Tue Nov 20 1990 23:457
    Just out of curiosity, whatever happened to the tradition of the man
    asking? If he WANTED to get married to her, he'd ask, right?
    
    Some things just should not change, and that is one of them...
    
    
    (My own personal opinion here is all)
546.13't'ain't jest in the movies...BRABAM::PHILPOTTCol I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' PhilpottWed Nov 21 1990 05:588
    
    Male response... why not?
    
    However I asked my wife and she replied "please ask Mowl" (Mowl being
    the woman acting as family representative. Only after she had agreed
    and I had formally asked Ann's mother did I again ask Ann...)
    
    /. Ian .\
546.14I did it !SHIRE::BIZELa femme est l'avenir de l'hommeWed Nov 21 1990 07:0314
    My husband and I had both decided not to get married.
    
    Then we decided we wanted kids, but still no marriage.
    
    While I was pregnant, a conversation with friends made us realise there
    was more to having a child out of wedlock than he or me had thought
    about. We took an appointment with a lawyer, and discovered that the
    Swiss law was extremely restrictive on the rights of unwed mothers and
    children born out of wedlock. The natural father also had some disad-
    vantages, but fewer. When we got out of the lawyer's, I said:
    "Well, I guess we have no choice but to get married...". He agreed
    lugubriously...
    
    Joana
546.15MOMCAT::TARBETbut Mary's more than able!Wed Nov 21 1990 07:316
    Joana, what a beautiful choice of words!  I can just picture the two of
    you walking out of the lawyer's office.     :-)
    
    
    (sorry of course that the laws made it all play out that way, it's only
    your description of the "proposal" that's funny)
546.16JURAN::QAR_TEMPI LIKE MIKE -- ABCWed Nov 21 1990 10:1311
    I've been married for almost a year now.  When my boyfriend at the time
    took me to look at "DIAMONDS" at the jewlrey store I selected the one
    I liked. He then took the ring in front of "everyone" and said "Nadine,
    will you marry me" (I didn't know whether to laugh or cry)!  He paid
    for it right there.  It was funny, watching everyone look at us going
    ah, as he kissed me when I said "YES"!!!
    
    
    
    -Nadine
    
546.17RUBY::BOYAJIANOne of the Happy GenerationsWed Nov 21 1990 10:2318
    re:.8
    
    It seems to me that "How would you like to get married?" is *much*
    more like a proposal (in the general sense) than "Will you marry
    me?" :-)
    
    re:.12
    
    	� Just out of curiosity, whatever happened to the
    	tradition of the man asking? If he WANTED to get
    	married to her, he'd ask, right? �
    
    If she WANTED to get married to him, she'd ask, right?
    
    I can't think of a more appropriate time to invoke the old saw,
    "What's good for the goose is good for the gander." :-)
    
    --- jerry
546.18acceptable..but SUBWAY::FORSYTHLAFALOTWed Nov 21 1990 10:445
    I (being female) see no reason NOT to be the one to ask, but I must
    confess, I would really prefer that HE did...(I guess I'm a little old
    fashioned in the wedding proposal sense, even though I'm only in my
    20's!)  And I am known for being quite independent and vocal...
    
546.19trying to keep an open mind :-)WMOIS::M_KOWALEWICZand then there were none.Wed Nov 21 1990 10:546
	I don't know if it is legal in some states already, but I
can envisage a scenario where a woman _must_ do the proposing.



				kbear
546.20Comfortable just living together.......ISLNDS::BARR_LWed Nov 21 1990 13:056
    Last July I attended my brother's wedding alone.  I caught the bouquet.
    I called my boyfriend and said "Guess what?  I caught the bouquet
    and you know what that means."  His response was, "Well,
    I guess that means we're next".  We had only been together a month
    at the time.  He tells everyone that I proposed to him.  We still
    haven't gotten married yet.
546.21MR4DEC::MAHONEYWed Nov 21 1990 13:334
    TO CATCH A BOUQUET IS NOT A REASON TO GET MARRIED...
    a marriage is something much more serious than that, your time will
    come when you're ready. Patience is a virtue totally neglected these
    days...
546.22WMOIS::B_REINKEbread&rosesWed Nov 21 1990 19:2816
    in re catching a bouquet...yeah but it is a cute reason to
    tease the one you want to marry and see what happens..
    
    as it was, Don and I had been talking for months that if we
    were both as much in love at the same time (we tended to see saw)
    that we should get married..
    
    so one day when I was feelin especially affectionate, I said
    'if you asked me to marry you now, I'd accept' and he did and
    I did!
    
    :-)
    
    so which one did the asking?
    
    Bonnie
546.23HOO78C::BOARDSWelcome back to the fold GB!Thu Nov 22 1990 12:0113
In England (and maybe elsewhere) there is a tradition whereby the
ONLY day on which it is acceptable for a woman to do the proposing is
on 29 February .....

Actually, I agree with a previous noter (forgive me, I noted not the name)
who said that it is probably more appropriate for the subject to come
up during a discussion on future plans.  That said, I'm a sucker for
romantic gestures !

PS:  I've both proposed and been proposed to.

Wendy

546.24XCUSME::QUAYLEi.e. AnnSat Nov 24 1990 18:5314
    One evening, my [not yet] husband asked, "When we're married, how many
    kids to you want?"
    
    I, determined at all costs to be cool (I was very young then), replied,
    "Oh, six, I guess."
    
    He turned faintly green, and asked, "Would you settle for three?"
    
    "Sure," I said.
    
    Later that year we married, and we've had three children.
    
    aq
    
546.25Give me that bended kneeHYSTER::DELISLEMon Nov 26 1990 10:396
    Call me an old fashioned traditionalist but I still think the male
    should do the proposing.  It has something to do with the male being
    the pursuer, I guess, which is my view of love and marriage.  As my
    father is so fond of putting it about boy meets girl, boy marries girl
    - "You chased her until she caught you, huh?
    
546.26Where would you like it?OXNARD::HAYNESCharles HaynesMon Nov 26 1990 10:4723
    You're an old fashioned traditionalist.
    
    (Someone had to do it...)
    
    > It has something to do with with male being the pursuer, I guess,
    > which is my view of love and marriage.
    
    I realize that the view you express is indeed the "old fashioned
    traditional" view, but I don't personally believe that that
    automatically makes it "right". (In fact, I'm automatically
    *suspicious* of it for that reason - but that's MY nature.) I agree
    with Joe, something as important as marriage should be a mutual
    decision. The two should have talked about it enough that by the time
    the "question" is asked the answer should be obvious to both.
    
    Now, mind you, I *did* get down on my knee to propose to Janice, but
    only after we had already agreed to get married.
    
    Just call me an old fashioned traditionalist... :-)
    
    	-- Charles
    
    P.S. She replied "Get up off the floor and kiss me you silly."
546.27Plan on 1991MAGIC::SANFORDTue Nov 27 1990 11:122
    Al will probably ask you at Christmas...