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The 4 Benefits of Marrying Young
Pajamas Media ^ | 12/01/2012 | Paula Bolyard

Posted on 12/02/2012 7:21:17 AM PST by SeekAndFind

A recent article on Yahoo extolled “The Benefits of Marrying Later in Life.” The writer, who waited until age 46 to marry, listed the benefits of delaying marriage:

– Learning to love herself and accept her self-worth
– Time to become her own person
– Benefit of knowing who she is
– Experiencing life as her own complete person

With all due respect to the author, her list looks like a recipe for perpetual singleness. A decade or more of doing what’s best for “me” and learning to love and complete “myself” is not the best way to prepare for the sacrifices and selflessness required to be one half of a couple. Be honest: Would you want to marry someone who has spent two entire decades of her life “learning to love herself”? She’s going to be a tough act to follow.

According to the Pew Research Center, the median age for marriage in the United States has risen to a record 28.7 for men and 26.5 for women, which means that half are older than the median when they marry. Marriage overall has declined as well; barely half of Americans are currently married, a record low, compared to 72% in 1960.

But those averages don’t tell the whole story. More and more in our society, success is defined as progressing along a pathway that includes high school, college, graduate or professional school, a career with a 6-figure salary, and, after a long succession of “practice” relationships, perhaps marriage and children (if the woman’s AARP-eligible eggs hold out that long).

Of course, it hasn’t always been that way. Until the early 1900s, no one had ever heard the words “teenager” and “adolescence.” Upon reaching the age of maturity (usually in the late teens), young people were expected to court and marry in short order. If a 20-something lived in his parents’ basement, he usually had a good excuse — such as missing hands and feet, or being in a permanent comatose state. In the book From Front Porch to Back Seat: Courtship in Twentieth Century America, Beth Bailey describes the societal changes that led to our current dating and marriage culture and the new phase of life we now know as extended adolescence:

Because young people were released, to a great extent, from adult responsibilities and decisions, the act of choosing a lifelong mate did not seem so immediately important. Within youth culture, the emphasis in courtship shifted to the social and recreational process of dating…

In a span of about 50 years, we went from supervised courtship with the expectation that marriage would be the end result to casual, recreational dating and, eventually, cohabitation as an accepted precursor or replacement for marriage. As a result of these cultural changes, not only has the marriage age crept steadily upward, but so has the divorce rate. Currently around 50% of new marriages end in divorce, compared to 8% in 1900 and 25% in the early 70s, when no-fault divorce laws appeared.

In light of these statistics, I’d like to suggest four compelling reasons why marrying earlier in life (perhaps by the mid-20s) might be beneficial.

4. Fewer relationships are better.

In his book I Kissed Dating Goodbye, Joshua Harris recounts a young woman’s dream about her wedding day. As she meets her groom at the altar, other young women begin to line up behind her future husband. They are both devastated as they realize that he will be bringing his (rather large) entourage of ex-girlfriends into their marriage. Harris goes on to explain that the dream was a metaphor for his dating experience.

He realized that he had given each girl a piece of his heart and had taken pieces of theirs. Each successive relationship left him with a little less to give to his future wife. It’s like when you stick two pieces of masking tape together and pull them apart. If you continue to repeat the process over and over again, eventually no stickiness remains. There would always be memories, thoughts, and images that were shared in previous relationships that would influence, and to some extent shape, the future marriage. Memories from past relationships can linger for dozens of years and threaten the foundations of even the most stable marriages. According to a survey at Your Tango, thinking about exes is a serious problem:

- 74% of women and 64% of men think about their ex too much
- 76% of women and 70% of men have looked up an ex on the internet
- 50% of women and 40% of men say they look at their ex’s Facebook or other online profile too often

In simple risk-assessment terms, the less baggage and the fewer corpses of past relationships you drag into your marriage, the stronger the foundation will be.

3. You can enjoy the journey of growing together.

Regardless of your age at the time of your marriage, you can count on both partners changing over the course of the relationship. Those who marry younger grow together rather than independently. My husband and I are approaching the 25-mile marker in our marriage and we are not the same people we married those many years ago. I was working at a job I hated and my husband was going to school and working at an oil change shop while serving in the National Guard. We lived frugally in a 3-room rental in a sketchy neighborhood in W. Akron. A few years later we bought our first house in a neighborhood on the outskirts of inner-city Akron for $38,000. Gary spent his weekends keeping our cars running and I learned how to make 101 recipes using ground chuck, which was $0.89/lb back then. If we had waited until our 30s or 40s to marry, we’d have missed those precious years of working together toward our goals and watching the lovely, slow progress that emerges over the years of living life as a team and arriving at the destination together. I wouldn’t trade those years of joy and struggles for anything. King Solomon, a man of extraordinary wisdom, had this to say: ”

Two are better than one, because they have a good reward for their toil. For if they fall, one will lift up his fellow. But woe to him who is alone when he falls and has not another to lift him up! (Ecclesiastes 4:9-10 ESV)

I suppose there are benefits to waiting until you have everything figured out and you have achieved success in your career before you “settle down,” but what a grand adventure you are missing along the way with the love of your life!

2. Sex and babies are for the young.

Our sexual desires and ability to procreate are innate, God-given characteristics. Those are precious, beautiful things and, as a Christian, I believe the Bible teaches they are reserved for the confines of marriages (read Steven Crowder’s excellent account of the rewards of abstinence before marriage). This is the best plan for a healthy, happy marriage. Expecting men and women with this sexual ethic to suppress those feelings until they are 30 or even 40 is frustrating, difficult, and, probably for many, cruel and unusual punishment. Marrying earlier rather than later avoids the frustration of denying and repressing one’s natural sexual urges and allows them to be expressed appropriately in the context of marriage. In addition, the 20s are the peak fertility years, especially for women. Marrying earlier can help avoid the heartache of infertility that so many couples face when they postpone childbearing until they complete their education and then spend a dozen years establishing their careers. It’s counterintuitive to delay having children until after the woman’s best chances for conception have passed. There is also the added benefit of not being the dad who asks for the senior discount at the ice cream stand after his kid’s t-ball game. And think about the weirdness of picking up both Children’s Tylenol and your Low-T medicine at the pharmacy.

1. Marrying early avoids the shacking-up trap.

For many couples, living together before marriage is a cover for their unwillingness to make a mature, adult commitment. I’ll first refer back to my previous point about God’s plan for sexual abstinence before marriage and monogamy within as the best route to a happy and healthy marriage. But in addition to that, I believe that cohabitation sets a very unhealthy pattern that leads to a culture of divorce. Living together before marriage to “see if we’re compatible” is practicing failure. The unspoken (or sometimes spoken) agreement is that if it doesn’t work out or if my partner doesn’t fulfill my desires, we can both walk away. It’s built on a foundation of selfishness and flies in the face of “For better or worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and health, forsaking all others, until death parts us.” Marriage is fun, fulfilling, and amazing, but it’s also really, really hard sometimes. There can be long periods of time when couples must wade through difficult periods of medical issues, family crises, financial problems, and routine boredom. Cohabitation gives couples license to walk away in the face of those difficulties, with the excuse that “they must not be compatible” or it “ wasn’t meant to be.” In contrast, marriage (technically) requires a commitment to permanence. Couples that survive and endure through dozens of years of marriage do so not because their marriages aren’t touched by trials, tragedies, and heartache, but because they manage to navigate these difficulties and persevere, fiercely resolute in the commitment they have made to one another and, for many, to God.

In his counter-cultural book Dating with Integrity, John Holzmann describes the solemnity of the vows, beginning at the moment of engagement:

To be betrothed means to be promised. People used to speak of “plighting” (pledging, promising) one’s “troth.” Troth means faithfulness, loyalty, promise. But whether we call it engagement or betrothal, the main thing people need to attend to is that their promises are true and they will do whatever they must in order to fulfill them. At the point of engagement or betrothal the great transition should occur. It is here that one should make one’s vows and plan to keep them. Before one makes a vow, all one’s questions should be answered concerning whether or not he or she intends to fulfill it. It is at the point of engagement that the big shift should occur between being “mere” friends to being committed to one another as husband and wife for the rest of our lives.

Couples in trial marriages via cohabitation arrangements refuse to make such commitments and instead enter into agreements that are, at their root, open-ended and even selfish. Experiencing one or more of these relationships/arrangements teaches couples to take the easy way out when the going gets rough. Rather than making semi-sincere vows (which, by the way, can also be made or implied in non-cohabitating serious relationships), perhaps we need a return to what our grandparents practiced: Avoiding the “practice marriage” trap by marrying young, embracing the gravity and solemnity of the marriage commitment, waiting until the wedding day to move in together, and staying together for life.

There are many factors to consider when deciding when and whom to marry: the maturity of the individuals, their financial independence, whether they have a realistic view of marriage, and, of course, whether they’ve found the right person to marry. The bottom line is that what we’ve been doing for the last fifty years isn’t really working. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that the way we do marriage is failing miserably, evidenced by the colossal divorce rate. It’s time to examine our modern marriage paradigms and ask if we can learn a thing or two from generations past. While I’m not suggesting that early marriage is right for everyone, I am saying that we shouldn’t automatically dismiss it out of hand just because current conventional wisdom says it’s a bad idea and the “experts” tell us that we need to spend a decade or more of our adulthood “finding ourselves” and learning to love ourselves more.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: marriage; youth
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To: Lakeshark; ding_dong_daddy_from_dumas; DoughtyOne; Gilbo_3; Impy; stephenjohnbanker; NFHale; ...
RE :”You're as pathetic as your loser mentor Rabadash. You ping an entire list of people, and the only one who isn't too embarrassed to show up to comment on your small souled negative tirade is the other most pitifully pathetic poster left on FR.”

I think you posted this same text already.

The funny thing is how you keep posting how you outmatch me and how you beat me and yet its you in every comment who are are whining and crying and having hissy fits.

I mean when you claim your comments are brilliant and mine shame me you completely contradict yourself when you go into your women's hissy fit when I ping others to witness your claimed mastery.

You betray yourself as that scared Little spoiled brat that you are with your pathetic endless whining. Did your Mommy run away tired of your complaining?? LOL

To: sickoflibs
I won't respond until you show us just one post. Just one post where you've shown an original thought, one post where you've spoken about something you stand for in a positive way.
Your only "original" idea will be to try to keep saying nothing, changing the subject for days, thinking you're clever. Well you're not, so put up or shut up.
Until such time, I'm not responding, not playing your stupid game so move on to another thread and keep proving ....
147 posted on 12/03/2012 7:15:30 AM PST by Lakeshark

you are pretty good at 'not responding' LOL

... forget everything that Sharky said before now, beleive what he says now instead.

161 posted on 12/05/2012 6:19:56 AM PST by sickoflibs (Has Bohner caved yet? And called it historic again?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 160 | View Replies]

To: Lakeshark
Your woman type whining and crying is starting to affect me

Bwaha
Bwahahahaha
Bwahahahahahahahahha!

*gasping for breath*

Bwahahahahahahahahaha.

:)

162 posted on 12/05/2012 6:26:58 AM PST by sickoflibs (Has Bohner caved yet? And called it historic again?)
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To: Lakeshark; sickoflibs
you're waaaay overmatched here.

sick, i think you should apologise to nemo, he is superior in his political insights about things like the coming mittens/sinate landslides...

remember how his mommy told us he was the least ugliest and most smarterest guppie in skool, so i think we should all bow and listen to his wisdom...

163 posted on 12/05/2012 6:50:38 AM PST by Gilbo_3 (Gov is not reason; not eloquent; its force.Like fire,a dangerous servant & master. George Washington)
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To: Gilbo_3; Lakeshark
RE :”sick, i think you should apologise to nemo, he is superior in his political insights about things like the coming mittens/sinate landslides...
...
remember how his mommy told us he was the least ugliest and most smarterest guppie in skool, so i think we should all bow and listen to his wisdom...”

You are right Gilb

Sorry Sharky, we should all listen to your wisdom next time you tell us that Romney is a sure win :)

164 posted on 12/05/2012 6:54:16 AM PST by sickoflibs (Has Bohner caved yet? And called it historic again?)
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To: sickoflibs
You're as pathetic as your loser mentor Rabadash. You ping an entire list of people, and the only one who isn't too embarrassed to show up to comment on your small souled negative tirade is the other most pitifully pathetic poster left on FR.

You're just pissed off because on that thread you just brought up (pitifully and purposefully misrepresenting the gist of what was said to elevate yourself as WILECOYOTEGENIUS), and because I dissed you as the pathetic negative loser you are on that thread, one who simply pisses and moans, stands for nothing, hates everything, says very little and isn't worthy of responding to, you got pissed off and now have to try to retaliate (Bwahahaha, as if you were capable of that). Note that everyone agreed about your pathetic nature and character.

It's who you are. Just like I pointed out on this thread earlier, it's your nature. You're a disaster to yourself.........kindly go slink elsewhere, you're waaaay overmatched here.

165 posted on 12/06/2012 6:59:16 AM PST by Lakeshark (!)
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To: Lakeshark
RE :”:You’re as pathetic as your loser mentor Rabadash. You ping an entire list of people, and the only one who isn’t too embarrassed to show up to comment on your small souled negative tirade is the other most pitifully pathetic poster left on FR.”

Are you still crying and moaning? Jeeze. Your tears are just too sweet.

No dad growing up?
You learned how to be a man from your sickly neurotic Mom instead of a man?

Your woman-like behaviour is just pathetic.

:)

166 posted on 12/06/2012 7:08:10 AM PST by sickoflibs (Has Bohner caved yet? And called it historic again?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 165 | View Replies]


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