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I have heard people say they are willing to have kids but shy away from being married. I consider getting out of a marriage to be less messy than a relationship of any sort that has children. So I see marriage as an 'entry-level+ commitment. If being married is considered a life-long commitment & that is too much for a person then kids shouldn't even enter the picture. I guess it's a declaration. I can't see the logic that says "I can't commit marriage but will commit to kids".
I'd say it rewards & promotes selfishness rather than community. And , married or not, couples don't seem to realise that each half has to give up some things & adapt to being with someone else. A sexual relationship is, to me, almost an oxymoron....
If both partners had kept their hormones in-check a little more they wouldn't be in such a mess.
This line of thinking seems very small-minded. What about people who are happier being unmarried and having children would make them very happy. Are you saying they should not have the right to have children? It is very logical to say "I can't commit to marriage but will commit to kids".
It is illogical to be in a relationship if it doesn't make you happy. Any relationship, if it lasts, will go through periods where those in it aren't happy. Those in it, say 30 years later, aren't the same ppl who started out in it - married or not. It's not about making sacrifices because you're married, it's because you're in a relationship - sorry if that wasn't clear, for being married is not an end in itself - more a public declaration/vow of one's love/desire/belief in another. I haven't seen many, long-lasting relationships where it was all about one of the partners. If one believes that humans aren't monogamous & mate for life (like some creatures in the animal kingdom) then marriage and many other legal/traditional trappings will never be agreed with.The line of reasoning that being married is an end in itself and therefore you should make sacrifices to maintain being married seems to be quite flawed. Marriage is a means to an end (happiness) and should never be treated as an end in itself. If it doesn't make you happy (for the right reasons [not conformity]) it is immoral and illogical to be married. This is why i never say congratulations to people who announce they are getting married. This is not an achievement. My response is "i am so happy you are so happy together - that is great".
Re hormones being kept in check. Long enough to make sure that kids won't be a result - risk management. As simple as "if it's not on, its not on". As a taxpayer, I would love the welfare bill to come down, so that having kids isn't seen as a way to boost income - and it happens.Can this and should this be consciously controlled?
Is it though? I'm not sure I understand why. Can you say a bit more about this, Tink?A touchy subject.
No, it's not intended to be either optimistic or pessimistic.I dont agree with the second part of your post as it sounds so pessimistic.
Sure. There are marriages (and non-marriage relationships) where the people are genuinely happy to be with each other.There are plenty of marraiges that have worked out and are still going, thats a blow to the ones that have made it work.
Yep, I'd always thought the marriage came first but it seems not. It's almost more common (anecdotally at least) to see couples having a couple of children and then later deciding to get married. I asked one such young woman about this who had got married a couple of years after producing the child and she offered the single reason that she was fed up with explaining to e.g. doctor's receptionists that as Ms XXXX she wanted an appointment for Kid ZZZ and that, yes, she did have a different name, but yes , she is the child's mother.I agree with Johenmo, that having children should be marraige first, that will never happen though, sadly.
I still think its important for the children.
Does that still really apply? I agree that it was certainly the case a couple of decades ago, but I'd had the impression young women are more capable of independent thought these days.It's important for a lot of people, particularly females i think, because of the social construct of that is what you are supposed to do. Some younger females i have come across are that immoral and slaves to cliche and stereotype that they need to find a new boyfriend before they split up with their current boyfriend (who they don't want to be with) - pathetic.
You've expressed really well what I was trying to and probably failing. So agree with this paragraph.The line of reasoning that being married is an end in itself and therefore you should make sacrifices to maintain being married seems to be quite flawed. Marriage is a means to an end (happiness) and should never be treated as an end in itself. If it doesn't make you happy (for the right reasons [not conformity]) it is immoral and illogical to be married. This is why i never say congratulations to people who announce they are getting married. This is not an achievement. My response is "i am so happy you are so happy together - that is great".
Alot are married and happy.
Yes, that is what I was getting at.They aren't happy because they are married though. They are happy because they enjoy each other's company, have a chemistry, are physically attracted to each other, etc. Perhaps this is what Julia is referring to. You don't need marriage to have what marriage supposedly signifies.
Today the overall American illegitimacy rate is about 33 percent (26 percent for whites). For blacks, it hovers at near 70 percent””approximately three times the level of black illegitimacy that existed when the War on Poverty began in 1964.
Illegitimacy is an important issue because it has a great influence on all statistical indicators of a population group’s progress or decline. In 1987, for the first time in the history of any American racial or ethnic group, the birth rate for unmarried black women surpassed that for married black women, and that trend continued uninterrupted until the passage of welfare reform. The black out-of-wedlock birth rates in some inner cities now exceed 80 percent, and most of those mothers are teens. Because unmarried teenage mothers””whatever their race””typically have no steady employment, nearly 80 percent of them apply for welfare benefits within five years after giving birth to their first child. No group can withstand such a wholesale collapse of its family structure without experiencing devastating social consequences.
(My bolds)In addition, growing up without a father is a far better forecaster of a boy’s future criminality than either race or poverty. Regardless of race, 70 percent of all young people in state reform institutions were raised in fatherless homes, as were 60 percent of rapists, 72 percent of adolescent murderers, and 70 percent of long-term prison inmates
In addition, growing up without a father is a far better forecaster of a boy’s future criminality than either race or poverty.
I'm not gay so can only hypothesise - however I think so I wonder if in another century people will either wonder what all the fuss was about (and find it as difficult to understand withholding marriage from homosexuals as I find it difficult to understand why the vote was withheld from women, for example) or whether they'll wonder why people used to do something as quaint as getting married....
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