marie1203
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2009
- Messages
- 1,857
The way I look at it, during your lifetime, there are certain experiences you will have, and certain experiences that are optional. Most people will attend school. Then you have certain choices. College? Living alone? Career? Marriage? Children? All optional.
I chose college, living alone, marriage, and children. Because I think college is important (there isn't a single person in my family, or DH's family, who doesn't have at least an undergraduate degree),
No, I don't have the experience of getting married young, but I do have the experience of getting married, and having children. People who get married young, and have children, do not, and will not, have the experience of being completely responsible for themselves, on their own. That is fine. Some people will never experience being parents. That is fine. I might not experience having a career, and not know what that is like. Some people think it's awesome, and I will never experience that.
The same way I missed out of the joy of having a career, some people missed out on living independently. Sometimes you can't have it all.
Just because I choose to get married young doesn't mean I don't think education is important I am still going to college and that is not going to change same as DH. All my family have degrees and by that I mean PHD except for 3. I got married young and didn't missed living independently, I live one year by myself before we got married and Dh is military and he was gone a lot of time at first. I never meet women that are more independent that military wives.
First, I think a lot of people are equating getting married young with having children young and that is incorrect. Many couples regardless of age do not start having children as soon as the rings are on the fingers. It's no question that having children changes things, but you only really "miss out" on things with marriage if you're the type of person who wanted to do these things in the first place. At 18, 28, 38, even 98 if you're the type of person who wants to date you will be unhappy in a marriage, if you're the type of person who doesn't want to make decisions based on someone else's needs as well as your own you will be unhappy. That's personality, not age.
I am 21 and not married, however at this point in my life I have no desire to "see the world" and travel overseas, but if I did it would most likely include my boyfriend. What's the difference? People want different things, and just because you (general you) are happy with your decisions doesn't mean they are superior to other's decisions.
Finally, I think age has little to do with the success of a marriage. It's the person you marry, and frankly I think waiting until a certain age just for the sake of not marrying "too young" is stupid. Get married when YOU want to, not when everyone else wants you to.
As a nineteen year old, when the OP said she started having children at nineteen- I freaked. No way, no how. I couldn't get married now even if I wanted to.
I certainly don't make enough to live off of myself, much less support children with.
Science tells us that your brain doesn't fully develop until about 24/25 and it is the part of your brain that thinks of consequences and right from wrong.
Once you're married and have kids, that's it- your selfish time goes out the door and you spend the rest of your life doing things for your husband and kids.
Having children and getting married very different we are married and I would freak too if I found out I was pregnant, because there still things I want to do before then.
Age is not related to the amount of money you make DH makes more than some people that have gone to college. Of course without some financial stability we would have never consider marriage.
Actually the rational part of our brain develops different by gender and varies in person to person. Most women's rational part of the brain is fully developed by 22 and in man it varies greatly from 24-27.
I disagree just because I am married it is not it. I still do things for myself in fact we encourage each other now and then to things for ourselves. For a marriage to work you can't neglect your individual self.
I went to my 10 year HS reunion with my first actual love. At the time I thought it was great. He was around, he looked adorable, he brought me drinks, and we left early to go back to our room.
Over the next year, especially after we broke up, I found out about all the FUN my single friends had had...they stayed up very late, telling jokes, hanging out in the hot tub singing karaoke with businessmen, just being nutty. WAY more fun than going to bed early (and some will say that that's saying mean things against the boyfriend...it's not, but that stuff is that stuff, it could have happened any old time, but I missed out on a once in a decade evening with old, good, friends, for the sake of that).
I think that all varies what we each want as individuals. I spent 2 years, partying, staying late, going to hot tubs, etc. And honestly by the 1 year and a half mark I stopped because I was done it just wasn't fun anymore. I much rather spent a night hanging out with my DH than doing what I could when I was single.
I am going to agree that our problem as a society is that we spend our lives following what society tells us that is the "right" way or what is "acceptable" instead of following what we really want. I also want to add that I think 18 is way too young to decided a career and that might be why most people that graduate from college end up in other career field and not actually using their college degree. I am thankful that I got a break from college because I learn quick that is not the career I want at all. I would have gone to college 4 years for something I later found out I didn't like. For my own kids I would want them to make decisions that make THEM happy not to follow what society tells them.

. I personally would be heartbroken if my daughter married in her teens and didn't have a career to fall back on if needed at a later time!
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