ljhayes said:Also, as a research statistician, I am quick to be skeptical of study results, as well. If you read the statistics on that page, these are all listed:
- In the United States and in the UK, couples who live together are at a greater risk for divorce than non-cohabiting couples.
- Couples who lived together before marriage tend to divorce early in their marriage. If their marriage last seven years, then their risk for divorce is the same as couples who didn't cohabit before marriage.
- If cohabitation is limited to a person's future spouse, there is no elevated risk of divorce.
To me, these seem like slightly contradictory results. Perhaps they're generalizable to different populations, but without specification, I'm not sure I'd invest strongly in any of them. Take everything you read with a grain of salt.
I completely agree with the previous poster. About the statistics... I used to work as a research assistant, and I reviewed studies about this topic. An example of why some "statistics" say couples who live together before marriage divorce earlier and/ or more often.
Couple A: Did not live together before marriage. Divorced after 5 years of marriage.
Couple B: Lived together for 2 years before marriage. Divorced after 3 years of marriage.
If you noticed, both Couple A and Couple B lived together for a total of 5 years. It is not necessarily the living together that caused the couple to divorce, rather, most couples tend to divorce within the first 5 years of marriage. Most social scientists now recognize the error and when they ask couples how many years they have been married they add the amount of time they lived together before marriage to that total.
Ok, I know that did not make much sense

Since living together before marriage is not traditional, it is difficult for parents and older generations to accept it. You and your DF have to do what is right for you. Good luck
