Posted on 10/14/2006 11:40:40 AM PDT by voletti
IT'S OFFICIAL: TO BE MARRIED MEANS TO BE OUTNUMBERED...
49.7%, or 55.2 million, of the nation's 111.1 million households in 2005 were made up of married couples -- with/without children -- just shy of majority...
Not quite caught up to you, yet. Married at 19. Currently at 13 years, 10 months, and 13 days. You want the hours and seconds too?
Yeah, I want my special rights....people don't understand how hard it is to be married. Government needs to help us....
Did you get a lot of flack for marrying at 19? Or how about, "How's married life?" for the millionth time?
It's wonderful.
Very true.
There are a lot of breakups, though, and I think it's all attributable to the incredible array of choices and dillemas offered by modern life. One party in the marriage will be offered "the big job" at some location the other party doesn't want to move to; one party will return to school and find his or her mindset no longer meshing with the other; one party will go on a "health kick" and get fit while the other remains slovenly; one party will become radically liberal while the other remains conservative (or vice-versa); one party will fall into a group of friends the other abhors; one party will give up drink or drugs while the other continues to imbibe.
The list just goes on and on. We all change so much these days, even in a span of months, that it's difficult to keep it all together. And it's not helped by the number of people who marry for "convenience" or simply to have children, or for money and "comfort," rather than waiting for true love -- which does exist, no matter what the gloom-and-doomers say.
In this, as in a lot of things, it was better in the "good old days."
People are not maturing fast enough and are not marrying soon enough IMO. After a while, people don't see a point in getting married and they do their best to justify that decision.
My husband and I met at ages 16 and 17. We just celebrated our 25th wedding anniversary last August. We married at ages 21 and 22. It WAS a lot of work. Retirement will be the test...we don't have kids.
United States and States |
R1101. Percent of Households That are Married-Couple Families: 2005 Universe: Households Data Set: 2005 American Community Survey Survey: 2005 American Community Survey, 2005 Puerto Rico Community Survey |
NOTE. Data are limited to the household population and exclude the population living in institutions, college dormitories, and other group quarters. For information on confidentiality protection, sampling error, nonsampling error, and definitions, see . |
Rank |
State |
Percent |
Margin of Error |
1 |
Utah |
61.5 |
+/-1.1 |
2 |
Idaho |
56.3 |
+/-1.2 |
3 |
New Hampshire |
54.3 |
+/-1.1 |
4 |
Hawaii |
53.4 |
+/-1.1 |
4 |
Wyoming |
53.4 |
+/-1.6 |
6 |
Iowa |
53.2 |
+/-0.7 |
7 |
Kansas |
52.7 |
+/-0.8 |
7 |
Minnesota |
52.7 |
+/-0.6 |
9 |
West Virginia |
52.5 |
+/-0.9 |
10 |
Nebraska |
52.4 |
+/-0.8 |
11 |
Montana |
52.1 |
+/-1.2 |
12 |
South Dakota |
51.9 |
+/-1.2 |
13 |
New Jersey |
51.8 |
+/-0.5 |
14 |
Texas |
51.7 |
+/-0.4 |
15 |
Indiana |
51.6 |
+/-0.6 |
16 |
Kentucky |
51.5 |
+/-0.6 |
17 |
Maine |
51.3 |
+/-1.1 |
18 |
Virginia |
51.2 |
+/-0.5 |
19 |
Arkansas |
51.1 |
+/-0.8 |
20 |
Connecticut |
51.0 |
+/-0.7 |
20 |
North Dakota |
51.0 |
+/-1.2 |
20 |
Oklahoma |
51.0 |
+/-0.7 |
23 |
Wisconsin |
50.8 |
+/-0.5 |
24 |
Delaware |
50.3 |
+/-1.3 |
24 |
Missouri |
50.3 |
+/-0.6 |
26 |
Michigan |
50.1 |
+/-0.4 |
27 |
Alaska |
49.9 |
+/-1.5 |
27 |
Colorado |
49.9 |
+/-0.6 |
29 |
Alabama |
49.8 |
+/-0.6 |
29 |
Pennsylvania |
49.8 |
+/-0.4 |
29 |
Tennessee |
49.8 |
+/-0.6 |
29 |
Washington |
49.8 |
+/-0.5 |
|
United States |
49.7 |
+/-0.2 |
33 |
California |
49.7 |
+/-0.3 |
33 |
Illinois |
49.7 |
+/-0.3 |
35 |
Georgia |
49.5 |
+/-0.4 |
36 |
Ohio |
49.4 |
+/-0.4 |
36 |
Oregon |
49.4 |
+/-0.7 |
38 |
North Carolina |
49.3 |
+/-0.4 |
39 |
Maryland |
49.0 |
+/-0.6 |
40 |
Arizona |
48.9 |
+/-0.6 |
41 |
Vermont |
48.5 |
+/-1.6 |
42 |
South Carolina |
48.2 |
+/-0.7 |
43 |
Florida |
47.9 |
+/-0.3 |
43 |
New Mexico |
47.9 |
+/-1.1 |
45 |
Massachusetts |
47.6 |
+/-0.6 |
46 |
Nevada |
47.5 |
+/-0.9 |
47 |
Rhode Island |
46.8 |
+/-1.4 |
48 |
Mississippi |
46.5 |
+/-0.8 |
49 |
Louisiana |
45.9 |
+/-0.8 |
50 |
New York |
44.9 |
+/-0.3 |
51 |
District of Columbia |
21.8 |
+/-1.4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Puerto Rico |
48.0 |
+/-0.6 |
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2005 American Community Survey
Data are based on a sample and are subject to sampling variability. The degree of uncertainty for an estimate arising from sampling variability is represented through the use of a margin of error. The value shown here is the 90 percent margin of error. The margin of error can be interpreted roughly as providing a 90 percent probability that the interval defined by the estimate minus the margin of error and the estimate plus the margin of error (the lower and upper confidence bounds) contains the true value. In addition to sampling variability, the ACS estimates are subject to nonsampling error (for a discussion of nonsampling variability, see Accuracy of the Data). The effect of nonsampling error is not represented in these tables.
It may seem odd but I was more in love with the idea of being married than I was with my first wife.
Never married.....49 yrs old. Was never on my agenda.....
I got married at 23, 12 years ago. The grass will never, ever be greener on the other side of the fence. I'm married to my best friend. That kind of consistent love is a conscious, deliberate decision for both of us.
In our church we form groups of ladies that meet once a month for a meal. The program is called "Titus II", which seeks to follow this pattern:
"Likewise, teach the older women to be reverent in the way they live, not to be slanderers or addicted to much wine, but to teach what is good. Then they can train the younger women to love their husbands and children, to be self-controlled and pure, to be busy at home, to be kind, and to be subject to their husbands, so that no one will malign the word of God."
Does this include the fudge packers who "marry" in Massachusetts?
BWAAAAAA!!!! HAAAA!!!! HHHAaaaaa!!!! haaaa!!!! D.C. - where liberalism rules and is THE way of life. The results are in!
My parents have been married for 42 years. Hubby's parents have been married for 45 or so. We married at the age of 24 and celebrated our 17th anniversary a couple of months ago.
IMHO, too many people think marriage is only about "love." It's not just about love. It's about making a LIFE LONG commitment to another human being. I also think too many people have unrealistic expectations of what marriage will be like...or what it should be like.
I can't imagine going through life referring to him as "my partner" or "my significant other."
Anyway, God only knows how I ended up with the man I have. He's just a good and decent guy, plain and simple! And I'm so thankful!
Never married.....49 yrs old. Was never on my agenda.....
It took me 46 years to find the right one. Got four kids with the package. Now one son in law and a grandson. Planning on mentoring the grandson into a total hooligan. Never knew how lonely I was until I got them all.
We're already 40 years into it.
According to standard wisdom among social scientists, he does it for sex.
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