P
PetraG
Guest
Well, that and the charitable works you devote yourself to because you aren’t responsible for supporting a family, of course.At this point, I can’t imagine spending time and money on anybody but myself![]()
Well, that and the charitable works you devote yourself to because you aren’t responsible for supporting a family, of course.At this point, I can’t imagine spending time and money on anybody but myself![]()
Couldn’t someone who thought that there was one special person out there feel that they ended up with the wrong one?Does believing you could have just as easily married anyone else suitably matched lead to melancholy pondering of whether a better match is out there in darker moments
A feeling of regret does not mean someone has taken the wrong path any more than a feeling of guilt does. Those feelings are given to us as signals to re-examine our actions, a way to know that perhaps we need to repent and amend our lives, not as infallible judges of our actions.Couldn’t someone who thought that there was one special person out there feel that they ended up with the wrong one?
That depends on whether you let it do that or whether you rely on God to help you to be faithful to the person with whom you have chosen to live out your baptismal vows and the state in life you share.Does believing you could have just as easily married anyone else suitably matched lead to melancholy pondering of whether a better match is out there in darker moments?
Yes. The virtue of virginity is valuable because it is a virtue. It has nothing to do with marriage statistics.And I have to say, of all of the demographic variables, virginity is one of the worst possible to lean on as a safeguard from divorce, because the other person’s virginity is something you mostly have to take on faith, whereas a lot of other stuff is easily verifiable.
It must vary according to sex, but most of the age gaps are probably older husband/younger wife. (The US median is a 2 year gap between spouses, with the husband being older.)I found all the age gap information super interesting. I wonder if it varies at all depending on which spouse is older, and if so, why?
Yes. I’m married to someone a good deal older, but I was also older when we married. We have done fine.It must vary according to sex, but most of the age gaps are probably older husband/younger wife. (The US median is a 2 year gap between spouses, with the husband being older.)
My take on the high divorce rate for big age gaps is that an age gap may introduce an artificial teacher-student element into the relationship, which will work organically for a while, but as the younger spouse “grows up” they will be less and less happy about being the older spouse’s pupil or the assumption being made that they always know less. Whereas, when you’re the same age, you can "“grow up” together.
Often this is true, but a woman cannot marry her horse. (I couldn’t resist, either!)And women prefer this. (I just couldn’t resist.)
That makes a lot of sense. We have a 7 year gap and there was a lot of frustration on his part over things I hadn’t learned yet that I probably would have known if left to cook as a single for a few more years. And then a funk when I caught up and the dynamic needed to change.My take on the high divorce rate for big age gaps is that an age gap may introduce an artificial teacher-student element into the relationship, which will work organically for a while, but as the younger spouse “grows up” they will be less and less happy about being the older spouse’s pupil or the assumption being made that they always know less. Whereas, when you’re the same age, you can "“grow up” together.
Yep. I didn’t marry until my late 20’s, so I wasn’t denied that experience prior to marriage.That makes a lot of sense. We have a 7 year gap and there was a lot of frustration on his part over things I hadn’t learned yet that I probably would have known if left to cook as a single for a few more years. And then a funk when I caught up and the dynamic needed to change.
You might be right. The God has one person for you narrative becomes possibly more distressing in dark times if you are pondering did I miss the only boat compared to the many suitable matches belief.Couldn’t someone who thought that there was one special person out there feel that they ended up with the wrong one?
Not really. Improve chance of, yes, guarantee, no.Hence virginity was highly prized because it was the only way for men to guarantee that paternity.
You’re not in any position to check, though, are you? Women aren’t cars–we don’t come with odometers, so you’re always going to have to be taking a lot of this on trust.My own conclusion: the preference for virgins is still just that: a preference, not a requirement. Don’t confuse the two. I don’t expect to find one nowadays. I still want a lower partner count, but the risk inherent even there means I must vet hard on everything else and not spend too much money on the wedding.
Didn’t you post above that Atlantic article about cheap weddings lead to fewer divorces? Yes, that was you. But now you have to have a dig at me for expressing cheap wedding sentiments? The irony is way richer than my coffee.Also, if we’re talking crazy expensive wedding, that’s one thing, but being unreasonably stingy is bad for one’s marriage. Make sure you understand the difference and make an effort to be flexible and learn to make compromise and don’t think that you can get your way all the time and have a great marriage.
As I said, I have no objection to inexpensive weddings (had a $700ish one myself back in the late 90s)–BUT everything I said about stinginess hurting marriages and families is true.Didn’t you post above that Atlantic article about cheap weddings lead to fewer divorces? Yes, that was you. But now you have to have a dig at me for expressing cheap wedding sentiments? The irony is way richer than my coffee.
But the men’s number then has to be the top possible median for both, right? Or, alternately, that the true median is probably mid-way between the two?The rest I’ll have a look at. But the same token of trusting women in person on their sexuality also applies to how men and women answer these kinds of surveys and this dynamic is something I’m well aware of through personal experience. Men tend to exaggerate and women tend to minimize. Has always happened and always will happen.