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One of the things that I love is being able to talk to my DH at night in our bed.

That is the absolute worst time for hubby and I to talk. We've gotten into MORE arguments at 1am than any other time...
This thread seems to be on the borderline between an advice thread and a religious thread... aren't religious threads banned?
http://disboards.com/showthread.php?t=2125870
We're not talking *about* religion, people are talking about how their life decisions have to do with or without religion. I can't explain that I didn't want to live with a guy but it didn't have to do with religion, unless I bring up that I'm not religious. etc etc.
I'm not sure what line of work he is in but maybe its something that right now has been effected by the economy and he wants to wait until things get better.
Social Studies teacher.
That's kind of harsh Bumbershoot. I can fully understand and respect his decision and do not find it to be silly at all. Actually, his original comment was that we would both have steady jobs before he propsed. I have a job, now we are waiting on him. At this point we do not know where he will end up. I took a job in that area mostly to be closer to him (although I do love the area!), but there just isn't a lot of demand for social studies teachers who aren't coaches. He could end up on the other side of the state! He wants to return to this area eventually, but we don't know if he'll be able to start out there.
It only makes sense that both of us enter married life only after we have achieved at least some semblance of financial stability. Financial reasons are some of the top reasons couples split up. Why make it harder for ourselves than it already is? We both have the same goals for the future, but we are at a time of transition and do not know what the future will hold. He is a very practical person and wants to be over this particular roadbump before entering into a permanent decision, and I can respect that.
I'm sorry you feel it's harsh. I feel it's reality. I planned my wedding for a LONG time and used online message boards for all of it. I cyber-met and met hundreds and hundreds of women, and heard their stories. And the idea of having to be stable before *proposing* makes no sense. Unless it's for the obvious, talked about, reasons I mentioned, but in those cases it's not "stability before letting a woman know *officially* that I love her and want to be with her for forever", but "getting enough money to buy a rock".
Finances don't break people up b/c there was no stability before a proposal. It's the couples' response to finances...too much, too little...imbalance of money-making but the people are treating each other like roommates so the money-maker gets big screen TVs and trips with friends while the other one struggles to make his/her share of the power bills...that kind of thing is what breaks people up.
And often, IMO, money arguments aren't the cause at all. Rather it's just a core problem with the couple that could have been figured out long before (either through really talking and even having counseling, or just by breaking up b/c you're not right for each other), being covered up by finances.
Although we didn't have a good experience living together before marriage (b/c neither of us wanted to do so), and although it nearly ended our relationship (and we were both making the same money at the time)...I'll give you the other side. My brother and SIL met when he was a soph and she was a jr in college. They were secretly engaged by the time he was a senior and she was graduated. They were living together...started as a "she's in town and living with her sister, I might as well be a roomie" thing for a summer, then he just never moved back to the dorms...and it caused a HUGE problems for my mom and stepdad. I had to step in and tell them to back off...they were paying for a dorm he was NEVER in, and they could either throw their money away or they could stop paying for the dorm and be happy for him. They got married at 22, in the same month that my brother was graduated from Duke and commissioned into the Air Force.
She didn't have a job and all he had were prospects of AF pay. So they started as college students with NO money, got married anyway (her mom gave her the wedding the mom had always wanted, brother and SIL were pretty much guests at their wedding, LOL), had low-pay prospects...more college for each of them (MBAs), more college for SIL (Duke Law), better and better jobs, now they are doing AMAZINGLY well.
If they felt like answering a question like "should we live together", and they wouldn't, they would say it worked out very well for them. But again, they weren't living as roommates even when they said they were, they were living as married. And they didn't let anything like money stop them from saying "I officially, even though we're not telling at least one set of parents, love you and want to stay with you, and here's a ring to prove it".
Eh, it's just anecdotes. And you're an anecdote too! That's all each of us is.
If you really truly agree with his needing "stability" before even proposing, then that's fine. If it's really all about waiting for $ for the rock, that's fine (more fine in my inconsequential opinion)
I'm sorry that it seems you got offended by the end of my post, when I'd given you quite a bit of info and thought, after spending quite a bit of time trying to seriously answer your questions. Always a bummer when that happens.
Hubby and I wouldn't be here if it weren't for the outspoken, forthright, in your face responses of some people and friends on weddingchannel's old message boards (they're cruddy now). Nothing helps you see your relationship for what it is, nothing helps you really know that you like your relationship, like other people asking you the really hard questions. It was that experience that helped us stay together, and trust me, very few of our friends (other than his best friend, who actually helped him move out the first time we lived together) thought we were good together. We KNOW what it's like to be judged by others from the outside of our relationship, but since the hard questions helped us solidify that we were happy with our relationship, that's why I do it.
But I'm sorry that it hurt your feelings.