WlknCntrdiction said:
To me your post screamed "insecure", I'm not here to flame you but please let me explain how I read your post.
Wow. That is one term no one has ever used to describe me. So, I'm thinking you are perhaps misunderstanding my statements. I shall respond to your points.
We're agreed on weddings. That's a start.
WlknCntrdiction said:
From Wikipedia:
Marriage is an institution in which interpersonal relationships (usually intimate and sexual) are sanctioned with governmental, social, or religious recognition. It is often created by a contract or through civil processes.
I never knew love could be so difficult, all these forms to fill out before you "actually" love someone. And why does the vow have to be in front of everyone? Can you and your partner not make a vow to yourselves? "Dear (insert fiances name here), I promise to love you until the end of my days and that we shall spend the rest of our lives together". See? It doesn't need to be announced for the world to hear, I think they practically already know you're in for the long haul since you're getting married but I see this "vow" thing as conforming to the masses.
You are using marriage and love interchangably. They are not. Marriage is, from the point of secularity, a legal binding of two people. That is not love. And though the above definition mentions social and religious recognition, the second sentence where it mentions "contract" and "civil process" makes marriage sound like it's
only legal. Again, there are many legal contracts completed every day that have nothing to do with love, including marriage.
I don't see it as only secular, but that's my personal feeling. Taking a vow in front of people can be very meaningful. It's not necessarily a "
now i'm really serious" statement, which could I suppose cause some thoughts of insecurity in others, though that feels a little judgmental. Taking that vow in front of people can be a statement of "This is my chosen One. Having one partner through everything can be hard at times. Will you, our friends and family, become part of our decision to be together forever, and support us?"
As for your notion of the vow having to be in front of people, I never said that at all. In fact, I said, "vow in front of friends/family/god/each other." Those slashes were meant to = and/or. If it's just in front of each other and no family, OK. That's fine. To get the legal benefits of marriage, however, it has to be a legal contract, meaning a legally appointed or sanctioned person has to preside. As to conforming to the masses, I'm sure for some people, that's all it is - simply going through some motions. It is not that for everyone.
WlknCntrdiction said:
Yes, I know I'm going to be called out for "non conforming just to conform" but for me it goes without saying that if I meet someone who I want to spend the rest of my life with then I will tell her and her only, it's no one elses business. I know that me and my girlfriend will last, we don't need "confirmation" of a vow to tell us that.
I'm not calling you out at all, as I see no reason to do so. What you ahve is special and you have chosen how you wish to define it together. That's wonderful and I'm happy for you. Why do you choose to look down your nose at how I and some others might care to define our relationships? Why do you assume I'm looking for confirmation? I've no idea what sort of confirmation one should look for in marriage...
WlknCntrdiction said:
Sense of security? And here I was thinking that having a loving, caring, respectable family looking after you gave kids a sense of security, the fact that they can talk to their parents about anything should give them the sense of security, not whether their parents are married or not.
Yes, those things will give them a sense of security, and they are by far the most important things to giving them that sense. But when they are younger, kids don't fully understand abstract concepts - you can act it, but talking about them is tough. All it could take is one other child in their class or on the playground to say something about like "your parents aren't married..." (children can be very direct) to make a child wonder. They are deeply inured to societal pressures, they haven't thought about the abstract ramifications of such things. Things are or are not.
WlknCntrdiction said:
This line just about confirms it for me. Official? Why does your love have to be official? And it's a nice thing? It's a nice thing to have your love be made official? Or do you mean it's nice to tell everybody that you two are madly, deeply in love? I'm going to go with the latter. You and him are in it forever? Then why get married?
Most people can say they love their partner, but obviously because it's not official they can't then be in love can they? Or they clearly aren't as in love as you two are, how could they be? Their love isn't official, they aren't married.
What does that mean for the couple in my example in my other post? Does it mean their 20 years of "false" love can't possibly compete with your love because you're getting married?
Again, there's a lot of swapping in love for marriage. Not the same. I'm not putting any doubt on your love. I never said anything at all comparing mine to yours - how could I? I don't know you!
By official, I mean what I described above, going and telling our friends and family we are together, forever, and asking them to be a part of that "together," and that he and I are now an us. I get that you don't feel the need to do that. I don't feel the
need to do it either. I don't feel the
need to be accepted or whatever it is you are referring to. I want to tell my family and friends. I want them to share in that. It's a difference, not a one is better the other, or one is right and one is wrong. I never said any different.
WlknCntrdiction said:
To me it's this very mentality about marriage being a "I'm better than you, I've got the documents to prove it" thing that gets on my nerves. You got married, whoop de doo. I've been with my girlfriend for 20 + years, we have a kid who is loved, cherished and not a moment goes by where we don't love each other, our child may be "illegitimate" but he/she is most certainly brought up better than yours. Bullshit and chips for tea again methinks
Never said I was better. As I said before, it's a difference not a right or wrong situation.
I will absolutely take issue with your statement "our child may be 'illegitimate' but he/she is most certainly brought up better than yours." I'd
never say a child is illegitimate. Ever. Any implication that I'd say that I take as a serious affront, and ascribing such a thing to me is quite out of line.
Further to that, suggesting my children would not be well loved and well brought up smacks of some hastily thought out reasoning based on overly judgmental conclusions you've drawn from a simple forum reply in which I said, basically, "I love my fiance very much and I cannot wait to be Mrs. ___." I've no idea where your comment came from, but it was not from me.