Boogie said:I still need to be a duo first.
Well yeah... that's what I meant T_T
Boogie said:I still need to be a duo first.
That's my goal, with a big emphasis on "if". At the moment, i'm happy dating, no, i'm happy just dating. i see no real advantage to marriage, and it seems like a big hassle with too much that could go wrong. i'm pretty sure my views will change somewhat as i get older, but i'll likely still be cautious.bjork said:If I ever were to get married, I'm only doing it once... the vows are there for a reason. If I'm not positive that I can stay with this person or they're unsure of me, the time is not right to get married.
We'll see.
:lol :lol :lolBoogie said:I still need to be a duo first.
LOL. Yes we did but only for a week due to various work commitments. Stayed in a rather fab Japanese house:Mama Smurf said:Did you not have a honeymoon or something?
Please tell me you did and kept posting at GAF while on it.
Please.
Teza said:Personally, Ignatz, I'm not convinced by the whole 'marriage as publicity' argument. I'm not sure that I'm comfortable with the notion of increasing the external influences on my love for another person. That would worry me. And in any case, if I ever do need help or advice during a relationship, I'd expect my friends and family to support me, whether or not my partner is my wife.
Do you feel the influence of your friends and family (i.e., your community) in your marriage? How would you describe it (really pin it down if you can) - as an obligation not to disappoint?
Marriage isn't for you then. It's a shame you have such a bad opinion of partnering someone you love...ZombieSupaStar said:I like doing thing when I like to, and having to accomdate my life to work with someone elses isnt something im willing to do.
Koshiro said::lol :lol :lol
Thanks Boogie, I was purposely scrolling to see if you had anything funny to say.
Ignatz Mouse said:You don't have to be convinced-- if that doesn't make sense to you, you probably aren't committed enough for marriage anyway.
Why not ask some people in your family or circle of friends who are married what they think?
Folder said:I did actually post a couple of times. My wife is as bad though. At one point she was playing four games at once. Animal Crossing GameCube, and had three GBAs going in three different rooms, Dr Mario, Mario And Luigi SSS and Minish Cap. We had decided to geek out that day. We are so doomed/destined for glory.
Teza said:I am deeply in love with her. She's breathtakingly beautiful, infinitely wise, almost superhuman in her generosity.... I get the distinct feeling that a marriage proposal would make her very happy. But it wouldn't make me happy. And since love is selfish....
:-OMama Smurf said::lol
Sounds like fun! I love your wife. When I'm back in the UK I'm going to find out where you live and stalk her.
I wish you a lifetime...wait...*checks calendar* 9 months of happiness. Hey that's good, she can pop out a sprog before the Mama Smurf years set in!
Ignatz Mouse said:I know plenty of very committed non-married people. But I doubt your commitment based on the comments you made to my previous post.
If you're really that committed, having the community support is not going to be an issue for you. If you are that committed, why *not* be married? That's not rhetorical-- it's the question you should be asking yourself.
Not to moralize to you (how are you, btw, old friend? ), but where ever did you get that idea? In my opinion, love is selfless. Sure, it's perhaps "selfish" in the sense of desiring exclusivity with your partner (unless you're a swinger), but in terms of how the partners relate to one another, and how it tends to reorganize one's priorities in life, it's anything but selfish imo. You might view that as overly idealistic, and perhaps different people express "love" differently based on their internalized, unconscious ideals, but when I was in love, it just "happened" that way-- I wasn't trying to conform to some preconception of what love was "supposed" to be.
Teza said:I already have all the support I need. So what does marriage bring to the table?
My point is this. It seems to me that marriage, as a type of social activity in which the wider community is involved, isn't merely about 'support'. It's about obligation. You yourself used the term 'public promise'. A promise is an obligation to others.
Now you may think that your obligation to the community and your commitment to your partner should be connected, but I don't. In fact it makes me uncomfortable. I would prefer it if my actions were predicated solely on my love for and commitment to my partner - and not diluted by a sense of obligation to others.
Folder said:
McLesterolBeast said:She started ignoring him and then posted about the situation in the OT forums.
So you were in love? What happened?
Loki said:Err, not quite, but thanks for playing Abba.
Teza:
Insofar as love is a "perceived" thing, it must ultimately be related in some way to how it makes us feel, else we wouldn't be able to perceive it; apperception-- particularly in the social sphere-- is frequently self-referential. I was speaking strictly of how love manifests itself in our actions towards the object of our love (typically, actions that flow from true love are selfless imo, though you're free to think that naive; I'm just going by my personal experience, as I've said). Of course, there could, I suppose, be purely "intellectual" love (perhaps closer to "philia" than "eros", to use the Greek) that's based purely on the qualities of a person (e.g., my girlfriend is charitable, kind, and intelligent, and for these reasons I love her), but typically love also involves an emotional (i.e., "nonrational") component that varies in intensity based on the person and, I would imagine, the degree of love felt (though these two-- the strength of the love experienced and the nature of the person-- may be intimately related in a sense, as the intensity of our perceptions are contingent, in large part, upon our psychological makeup).
Now, if it were the case that a person loved someone else purely in this intellectual, rational sense, then I could perhaps see them not being selfless in their actions towards that person, since whatever rational analysis the person would perform in order to determine the proper course of action would be wholly dispassionate (whereas all such analyses performed when one is in "traditional" love are influenced by our passions; the "love object" is exalted). But since I'm reasonably sure that you're experiencing "love" in the more common sense, I'd tend to say that you'd be inclined to be selfless in your actions towards your partner.
Again, this is wholly separate from the question of whether our experience of love is a "selfish" thing (since I wasn't using "selfless" in this same context that you allude to, but rather applying it to the behavior between the partners). Actually, now that I'm thinking about it anew, I suppose that even this distinction (between one's experience of love and the actions one takes in its name) is an artifical one in a sense, since the "selfless" actions that spring from love can be viewed as tending towards the furtherance of the "love relationship"; since one enjoys how their partner makes them feel (the "selfish" component you've mentioned), they'd tend to perform actions that would keep them around. Since selfish actions aren't socially sanctioned, they would be frowned upon by one's partner, thus causing one to be "selfess" if they desired to maintain the relationship; the motivation, then, would ultimately come back to the "selfish" desire of the individual to maintain a relationship with the object of his affection. I can see this, I suppose-- but allow me to add that it's an incredibly cynical view(you'd likely call it the "realist" view
); also, the fact that one can construct such a theoretical framework doesn't necessarily mean that it's true. The "traditionalist" account of love is also plausible, though for different reasons.
One thing that would speak against such a cynical account imo, are actions taken between lovers that seemingly are truly "selfless"-- that is, that they do not contribute to the perpetuation of the relationship. Examples are difficult to construct for various reasons, but I will say that I've personally been in such a situation, and I chose an action/option that did not tend towards the continuance of the relationship. Now, whether this is a function of the "love" itself, or rather of the individual (their preconceptions, character etc.), is up for debate, obviously, but these things do exist and do occur frequently; I believe that they mitigate against at least a hasty conclusion of "love is selfish".
I tend to believe that true love-- in the best sense of the word-- transforms people and makes them better, fuller human beings. Or, at the very least, makes them realize the very best within themselves that may have theretofore lied dormant.
Of course I've been in love. I'm nearly 27 years old-- I should hope I've been.As for what happened, well, I hope you'll accept the fact that it's not something I feel entirely comfortable discussing with the forum.
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ToxicAdam said:DO NOT MARRY BEFORE THE AGE OF 25
Unless you want children or are about to have a child. The statistics of failed marriages when both participants are below the age of 25 are outrageous.
In general I would say don't get married unless you want to start a family. If you are someone who thinks "We may want kids one day ... but lets get married first". Hold off.
Marriage is so worthless unless you are trying to start a family. I know too many people who have been through 1-2 marriages and are only 30 years old. Its kind of sad.
(I myself waited until I was 28 until I married)
I think what he means is that people don't appreciate what marriage is all about unless they are planning to have kids. Generally people who want to have kids are slightly less throwaway about marriage.maharg said:Your advice on wanting children makes no sense. If you want children you should be *especially* wary of marrying before 25, not less so. If divorce rates are astoundingly higher for under 25s, think of all the broken marriages *with children* you're basically saying are a good idea.
If you get married before 25 with no intention of having any children in the near term, given the information you're bringing to the table, you're the smart one. You'll know long before you're actually willing to have children whether the marriage is likely to work out, while if you marry under 25 for the purpose of having children immediately (or because you already have one), you're basically dooming the child to a broken home.
Jonnyram said:I think what he means is that people don't appreciate what marriage is all about unless they are planning to have kids. Generally people who want to have kids are slightly less throwaway about marriage.
This doesn't seem to make sense. How can the wedding ceremony and not the marriage constitute the public promise? Does the public promise end once the ceremony is concluded?Ignatz Mouse said:My point is, if you're deeply committed, the community connection is almost an afterthought. The wedding, btw, is the public promise part, not the whole marriage. The marriage (to me) is just formalizing the level of commitment that you already have.
Again, you should ask "why not be married?" and really look at all the reasons free of moral judgments of them. If the ability to end the relationship later without disappointing anyone is one reason (which you imply, I think) , than so be it. I'm sure there are many other reasons as well. Really do an inventory, light-side reasons and dark-side reasons.
With respect, I don't see how this is relevant. (I also don't accept that you can draw such an easy distinction between 'intellectual' and 'emotional' love.)Insofar as love is a "perceived" thing, it must ultimately be related in some way to how it makes us feel, else we wouldn't be able to perceive it (the exception being things/ideas that are purely mentally discerned-- love, like most social phenomena, is not one of these; besides, attempting to make it so leads to an overly mechanistic view of life, which is no fun); apperception-- particularly in the social sphere-- is frequently self-referential. I was speaking strictly of how love manifests itself in our actions towards the object of our love (typically, actions that flow from true love are selfless imo, though you're free to think that naive; I'm just going by my personal experience, as I've said). Of course, there could, I suppose, be purely "intellectual" love (perhaps closer to "philia" than "eros", to use the Greek) that's based purely on the qualities of a person (e.g., my girlfriend is charitable, kind, and intelligent, and for these reasons I love her), but typically love also involves an emotional (i.e., "nonrational") component that varies in intensity based on the person and, I would imagine, the degree of love felt (though these two-- the strength of the love experienced and the nature of the person-- may be intimately related in a sense, as the intensity of our perceptions are contingent, in large part, upon our psychological makeup).
Now, if it were the case that a person loved someone else purely in this intellectual, rational sense, then I could perhaps see them not being selfless in their actions towards that person, since whatever rational analysis the person would perform in order to determine the proper course of action would be wholly dispassionate (whereas all such analyses performed when one is in "traditional" love are influenced by our passions- i.e., the "love object" is exalted). But since I'm reasonably sure that you're experiencing "love" in the more common sense, I'd tend to say that you'd be inclined to be selfless in your actions towards your partner.