At the moment, no. But in 10-20 years who knows? Same about kids really. I'm still 18 so I still have at least 3-4 years left of studying. If I might meet the right girl then why not?
:ten.to.ten said:I never thought I'd want to get married, then I met the love of my life and all that changed.
However, I'm gay so I can't.
same here...altho im kinda going out...*looks at clock* in 10 mins to get one...sooooo.yeahhhMarik2 said:LOL thats pretty much my plan as welllacktheknack said:Yep.
step 1: Get girlfriend... I'll figure the rest out after that.
hope you have better luck with her dad than i did with my ex's (but still the love of my life) dad.MasterOfWorlds said:I plan on marrying my gf once we're both done with college. I think her dad might learn to like me by then, and not give us grief about it. XD
So if both options create problems anyway, how is marriage preferable?.robrob said:I think you've got it backwards, what people want is the big elaborate party showing their love to the world and the piece of paper comes with that.sumanoskae said:I get that, but if it's not about the paper, then why bother with the paper. What else separates weddings from, say, a(Considerably less expensive) party you throw with your friends or family to celebrate you and your significant other making a decision about commitment or children?.
What about marriage makes it so emotionality significant as to make up for the potential divorce hassle when the two of you get tired of each other because your relationship has nowhere else to go, or you become attracted to someone else?
Marriage (and the paper that comes with it) existed long before expensive weddings involving expensive food, drink, clothing, etc. The problem with the idea of having a "decision about commitment" parties is that if they were adopted by a significant number of people they would wind up being as expensive and elaborate as weddings anyway, you can't invite 100 people to a party about one of the most significant decisions in your life and feed them crackers and cheese whiz.
Plus I think you'll find that simply living with someone for long enough will create divorce hassles. Legal ownership of certain assets becomes blurred and similar legal routes are open to sue each other endlessly thanks to that. A lot of divorces wind up about children too, that's probably the worst part, and those lawsuits can happen regardless of whether you're married. Plus I don't think many people think about it when they get married, considering it's a bond for life thing going on.