I think that’s the myth though that if you take care of yourself you’ll live longer. Excluding extreme behavior, most of it is most likely genetics & environment. I thought that was the point the pp made that I was agreeing with. I’ve known many ppl who took care of themselves by most standards & died of cancer. They all lived in Louisiana though. I think we rank 3rd highest in cancer deaths in the US. In my department alone right now there are 5 youngish ppl who have cancer.
Taking care of yourself means living a more healthy life and likely a longer life. I don't think this is really an opinion.
Admittedly, some things are out of our control; for example, the risk factors for breast cancer are being female and growing older -- none of us can avoid those things. However, eating a good diet and exercising regularly greatly reduce your chances of heart disease, stroke and diabetes. You have control over quite a few health issues.
i personally liked that dh and i had lived together and knew each other's living habits-i had a few friends who were wholly unprepared for their new spouse's lifestyle habits (what constitutes a 'clean' home, who is responsible for what chores, budgeting/lack thereof...) and it was a real adjustment for them; for some one that couldn't be achieved and divorce was pretty quick afterwards (love does NOT conquer all-esp. if one spouse believes with every fiber of their being that by virtue of marriage the other becomes the live in de facto cook, housekeeper, handyman, auto mechanic....).
Although we didn't live together before marriage, we didn't come into our marriage unprepared at all. We knew each other well, including negatives. For example, I'd been to his apartment and knew he wasn't going to do much in terms of cleaning. We were both out of college, and we'd both lived on our own -- I think that makes a world of difference.
Mandatory pre-marital counseling with our pastor was VERY useful. He brought up loads of topics to get us talking about our expectations, and he gave us lists of things to discuss. I remember we started going through the list on a long drive (to his father's house), when we talked very seriously about all sorts of things -- career aspirations, how to decide when to spend /when to splurge, disciplining children, expectations for paying for children's educations, the importance of a nice house, taking care of elderly parents -- quite a few things that we wouldn't have thought about talking about. That was tremendously helpful to us, and that list led to so many conversations.
yup-if people are smart they do a 'living together contract' to spell everything out BEFORE they start living together.
I agree that spelling things out is a great idea, but how many people do you think actually do it?
I know you are not asking me directly, but I will give my opinion. I think MrsPete's came off as more snide to me because I think the tone of superiority that some people like to use when speaking of religion is off putting. I define myself as a recovering Catholic for the record, meaning I now longer attend church regularly, but I was baptized and confirmed. Anyway, you do not have to be religious to take marriage vows seriously or to hold marriage out to be something special.
I kept religion out of my initial post and attempted to discuss ideas /concepts. I did not single out or insult any individual. I purposefully avoided emotionally-charged words that often come up with this topic; for example, "living in sin" or "shacking up". If you read in superiority or rudeness, you were projecting your own ideas onto my post; that is, you expected a religious argument and "filled in some blanks". (Okay,
that was snide. Purposefully.)
My issue is the bias of bankrupting the father instead of equal rights. I don't get any support when they are with me. I also have to provide a home for them while providing a home for them with their mother. I do not have the ability to provide a decent home and feed them with nutritious food. The courts make it impossible for the father. I was out of a home for 2 years and didn't see my children unless we went and sat at the mall.
She's probably living through the same things, even if she's in the house and has the child support.
Think about it: You and your ex-wife make X amount of money; that money used to support one household, and now it supports two households (plus lawyer's fees). You and your ex-wife used to have X number of hours available between you for care of the house and children. Now that same number of hours must stretch between two households. When the same amount of resources are stretched further, everyone's lifestyle is going to suffer.