[sub]Time for some more ramblings of a teenager, so get your "you just don't get it" comments ready. Plus, it's 3 in the morning as I type this so don't rip on my grammar/flow of thought.[/sub]
I don't see how marriage is considered the best life plan to the average citizen. Granted, I'm a very systematic person and I always want to have a plan that will benefit me the most in the end (I have OCD, but this is the internet, so does everyone else according to them). I just don't see how marriage can end happily, lets look at the reasons someone might marry:
1. They love each other
This shouldn't be a real reason, it's pretty illogical. If you love someone enough that you want to stay with them forever, why do you need to chain them to you with a marriage status? Obviously you don't trust them to stay with you forever and ever since you crave this human interaction much. If I find a mate who I'm very comfortable with (which is unlikely, I prefer to be alone but not ronery.), they're free to leave at any time if for some reason or another they don't like me as much, I don't want to be stuck with them if they change their mind, and I'm not going to force them to do something they don't want.
So then if someone is marrying for this reason, it's doomed to fail. They must be marrying for another reason alongside this one.
2. To support each other financially.
This is the most logical reason to marry, to me. But in today's culture (especially American culture), it's natural that the divorce rate is 50%. If two people married for love, and stopped loving each other, then let them split. Everything's fine now right? Wrong, the financial aspect of a divorce most likely leaves one member in ruins. I don't want to to sound like a misogynist but it's pretty common knowledge that men suffer the worst in divorces.
If you are considering marrying someone and realize that you wouldn't be able to support the both of you, that's a smart move and people respect you for that. If you are considering marrying someone and realize that you wouldn't be able to recover if it goes bad, then you're a coward who is afraid of commitment.
More on that- is the point of marriage that you are "committed" to them? Like love must be proven by showing that you are willing to "lock yourself" in the marriage 'till death do you part? Kids seem to be 'collateral' to ensure that the parents won't leave. The popular phrase "do it for the kids" comes to mind, though I'm not able to speak on that since I've never had a kid. I don't understand what its like to consider your son or daughters life in the equation when considering divorce.
Here's a point that fits in both categories, so I'll write it here: IF you are married and the marriage goes wrong. When you split up, the wife will most likely take half of everything and leave you worse off than before the marriage.IF you were just dating or whatever and she decides to beat it. Just change the locks on your door, and its over.
If its the MAN who leaves, then that makes it hard for the woman to recover especially if she was a stay-at-home mom. Its more likely that the woman will be living by herself if they are not married, but the emotional damage is large in both cases.
Of course there are cases where the divorce is equal and everyone leaves happy (that's definitely the exception), but then what was the point of marrying. I would say 99.99% of couples don't know each other fully, as suggested by the "she just changed since last year" or "you're not the man I married". They marry because they believe they'll be financially set if they combine their money, but money can change people. But what do I know, I'm just a teenager.
I don't see how marriage is considered the best life plan to the average citizen. Granted, I'm a very systematic person and I always want to have a plan that will benefit me the most in the end (I have OCD, but this is the internet, so does everyone else according to them). I just don't see how marriage can end happily, lets look at the reasons someone might marry:
1. They love each other
This shouldn't be a real reason, it's pretty illogical. If you love someone enough that you want to stay with them forever, why do you need to chain them to you with a marriage status? Obviously you don't trust them to stay with you forever and ever since you crave this human interaction much. If I find a mate who I'm very comfortable with (which is unlikely, I prefer to be alone but not ronery.), they're free to leave at any time if for some reason or another they don't like me as much, I don't want to be stuck with them if they change their mind, and I'm not going to force them to do something they don't want.
So then if someone is marrying for this reason, it's doomed to fail. They must be marrying for another reason alongside this one.
2. To support each other financially.
This is the most logical reason to marry, to me. But in today's culture (especially American culture), it's natural that the divorce rate is 50%. If two people married for love, and stopped loving each other, then let them split. Everything's fine now right? Wrong, the financial aspect of a divorce most likely leaves one member in ruins. I don't want to to sound like a misogynist but it's pretty common knowledge that men suffer the worst in divorces.
If you are considering marrying someone and realize that you wouldn't be able to support the both of you, that's a smart move and people respect you for that. If you are considering marrying someone and realize that you wouldn't be able to recover if it goes bad, then you're a coward who is afraid of commitment.
More on that- is the point of marriage that you are "committed" to them? Like love must be proven by showing that you are willing to "lock yourself" in the marriage 'till death do you part? Kids seem to be 'collateral' to ensure that the parents won't leave. The popular phrase "do it for the kids" comes to mind, though I'm not able to speak on that since I've never had a kid. I don't understand what its like to consider your son or daughters life in the equation when considering divorce.
Here's a point that fits in both categories, so I'll write it here: IF you are married and the marriage goes wrong. When you split up, the wife will most likely take half of everything and leave you worse off than before the marriage.IF you were just dating or whatever and she decides to beat it. Just change the locks on your door, and its over.
If its the MAN who leaves, then that makes it hard for the woman to recover especially if she was a stay-at-home mom. Its more likely that the woman will be living by herself if they are not married, but the emotional damage is large in both cases.
Of course there are cases where the divorce is equal and everyone leaves happy (that's definitely the exception), but then what was the point of marrying. I would say 99.99% of couples don't know each other fully, as suggested by the "she just changed since last year" or "you're not the man I married". They marry because they believe they'll be financially set if they combine their money, but money can change people. But what do I know, I'm just a teenager.