Don't wait for marriage
Waiting around to walk down the aisle may make your wedding vows harder to keep.
It was the end of my junior year of college, and I was considering marrying the woman of my dreams. My father questioned the wisdom of marrying so young (even though he was even younger when he married my mother), but I reassured him that we had come to deeply know and love each other over the last two years and that we wanted to go through life together, starting right away. I explained that we did not want to become "established" and then get married; we wanted to go through that adventure together.
We married the summer before my senior year with little money, a tiny apartment, and endless dreams of our future. Thirty years later, my wife and I are still thankful that we made the decision to grow up together through our 20s.
But my father's apprehension in 1980 has become the trend of this new millennium. In fact, a recent Wall Street Journal article pointed out that some sociologists argue that "early marriage" is the No. 1 predictor of divorce. They encourage young adults to explore their identity, work, and love by delaying marriage and parenthood until their later 20s. They warn that those who fail to postpone these family transitions miss out on better career opportunities, make poorer choices on partners, and develop more marital problems.
Today the perception is that marriage takes more than it gives and brings a good chance of ending in divorce. It shouldn't surprise anyone that the median age for one's first marriage has shifted from the early 20s in 1980 (my decision was the norm at that time) to 28 for men and 26 for women today.
It seems intuitive that age would bring maturity, stability, and better decisions, which would result in more lasting marriages. However, there are a number of risks that work against these later marriages and question the wisdom of this social trend to delay marriage into your 30s.
The starting point is a reconsideration of the claim that early marriages contribute to higher rates of divorce. There was a study conducted in 2002 by Tim Heaton that did find high rates of marital instability associated with young marriages, but the risks were with teen marriages. The impact that age had on predicting marriage outcomes leveled off around age 21 with age making little difference for those who marry between 21 and 30.
Furthermore, there may actually be increased risks associated with delaying marriage to the end of your 20s or into your 30s. For instance, waiting to get married often leads to more premarital sex, premarital cohabitation, and premarital births, which are all associated with higher rates of marital instability. In addition, there is a smaller selection pool as you reach your early 30s (by age 30, 75 percent of the population are married). At that point, the chances of achieving a quality relationship lower because of the difficulty with finding a suitable partner
These risks are often overlooked because of a prevalent attitude today that is quite dangerous and misleading: What you experience in one relationship has no bearing on what will happen in a subsequent relationship. You could call this "relationship compartmentalization," where each relationship occurs in its own compartment without any effect on another.
I like to refer to this attitude as "What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas." Obviously, this cannot be true because what occurs in relationships, no matter how insignificant, carries some measure of influence on you, the way you think, and what you take into your next relationship. As scripture says in what is both an encouragement and a warning, "You reap what you sow."
A sobering example of this was found in the research on women by Jay Teachman from Western Washington University. He showed that premarital involvement with just one sexual partner other than the person a woman eventually married tripled the risk of divorce as compared with those who had only had sex with their husband.
A second example of present relationship decisions affecting future relationship practices was a study that found a clear connection between the number of sexual partners before marriage and the likelihood of marital unfaithfulness; each additional sexual partner before marriage resulted in a significant increase in the risk of having an affair after marriage.
These are just two examples from an extensive body of research that supports the continuity of relationship experiences. And yet these research findings seem to get lost on library shelves without reshaping the current practices in our dating culture.
Several researchers examining the attitudes toward first marriage of 800 young adults ages 19 through 26 use the term "marital horizon" to talk about what young adults think is the ideal age for getting married. They found that having a more distant marital horizon was directly related to more risky premarital beliefs and behaviors.
Today more than 65 percent of married couples say they cohabited before marriage. Yet there is no evidence that living together before marriage will improve the quality of your marriage or lower your odds of divorce. However, most do not realize that those who live together with just one partner other than the one they marry may increase their risk of divorce by 15 percent.
The point is that one's attitude toward marriage during the dating years will affect relationship practices. And what happens in relationships today will affect any future marriage. For better or for worse, the principle that "you reap what you sow" holds true.
How can we support marriage and stop the rising age of marriage? Societal attitudes will have to change, but that starts with individuals deciding to date in ways that will honor their future spouse and marriage.
Reggie walked into my counseling office when he had just turned 23 years old. He was the personification of the current dating attitude that marriage was nowhere in sight and hooking up had no future consequences. However, the accumulation of his highly accelerated and sexually charged relationships had left him feeling empty and alone.
After several months of exploring his past relationship patterns he decided to delay sexual involvement until he married and to build more serious friendships and romantic relationships with his goal of having a fulfilling marriage on his horizon.
When we met again four years later, he had just become engaged to Renee and thought it would be good to meet together and make sure their relationship was ready for marriage.
In one of our sessions Renee asked me if I thought Reggie's past would affect him in their marriage. In other words, was it too late for Reggie? I told them that we are creatures of habit and Reggie made changes in his romantic relationships that created new habits and patterns. He "sowed" four years of new habits that will reap better results in his future marriage than if he had continued his previous lifestyle to the edge of his relationship with Renee.
Romantic relationships before marriage should be enjoyed-but this can be done in ways that benefit a future marriage. There is hope, promised in scripture and backed by research, for both the Renees and Reggies in the world. But it takes a commitment to attitudes and behaviors beneficial to marriage long before the wedding bells ring.
And the Survey Says...
By John Van Epp, president of LoveThinks and author of How to Avoid Falling for a Jerk (McGraw-Hill, 2008).This article appeared in the September 2010 issue of U.S. Catholic (Vol. 75, No. 9, pages 18-22).
young marriage
By Anonymous (not verified) on Wednesday, February 9, 2011I will heartily disagree that early marriages are more stable. Statistics have consistantly shown that marriages after 30 are more likely to succeed. Finances are more stable then and the couple will have "sowed their wild oats" by then. I will continue to advise teenagers to wait until late 20s or early 30s to get hitched for the first time.
No Best Time
By reddog (not verified) on Wednesday, September 1, 2010There is no better time than any other to get married. The important thing is that the couple are committed to each other and understand what they are doing. If they decide, for whatever reason, to spend their lives together, maybe raise a family and never marry, who cares? Not God, I'm sure of that.
You can get married at 18 or 38 and still have 5 or 6 kids, if you want, not even many Mormons have more than that anymore. If you're holding out for a return to those marriages that routinely produced 15 or 16 births over 25 years, you're dreaming. My brother in law comes from a family like that, one of the last ones. He's the youngest child and sixty five. None of his siblings, even those that married young themselves and were having their families in the 40s and 50s didn't have more than 3 children. They didn't want a repeat of their own childhoods for their kids.
If I had met someone I wanted to marry at 16, I would have done it. I think most people would. We got married in our thirties and it's been 29 years. Neither one of us was "settled" or "financially secure" even then. Who cares about that? We're having a fine time.
File this article with the ones about not using contraception, not allowing Gay marriage or any of that other stuff that's just nobody's business other than those involved. Catholicism is what Catholics do and that's us. You wanna do what the priests tell you? Maybe you should follow one or two of them around on Friday nights. Gross.
There never was a time when
By Anonymous (not verified) on Thursday, November 18, 2010There never was a time when marriages routinely produced 15 0r 16 children. Such families were always the exception, long before artificial contraception came into vogue.
Shotgun Wedding
By Anonymous (not verified) on Tuesday, August 31, 2010Has anyone noticed that the priest in the illustration is holding a gun? He's not pointing it at the couple but the bride is smiling at it and the groom is staring grimly ahead. I know about guns. That's no starter's pistol. It's a short barreled stainless steel revolver, maybe a Ruger SP101 in the new .327 Federal Magnum. The bride seems to like it. The groom seems to fear it. A shotgun wedding? Grounds for annulment? That's for the tribunal to decide.
youthful marriage
By Anonymous (not verified) on Tuesday, August 31, 2010My husband and I married when I was 19, he was 22. Our happy marriage lasted until his death 31 years later. I am glad of our youth when we married because it gave us time we might not have had otherwise. Even though I cared for him through a long illness, it was worth every minute, and we were able to give our children a happy and faith-filled childhood.
We have been in love and
By Annie (not verified) on Wednesday, August 18, 2010We have been in love and happily married for almost 40 years. We were 25 and 31 when we married and both very glad that we did not marry our college sweethearts. I know young marriages (that took place shortly after college graduation) that worked, but know more that didn't. Friends whose first marriages failed are in second marriages of 30+ years. If only they had waited.
I have friends (married 35-40 years) who are agnostic, non-Christian, Christian/non-christian, etc. They share a value system and have happy marriages. Co-habitation was rare then (the only couple I know who co-habited then has been happily married now for 35 years), but pre-marital sex was common, especially when engaged. If the couple were not promiscuous before they met, their own pre-marital lovemaking did not hurt their marriages. Most made love with their eventual spouse before marriage. However,they were often one another's first and only sexual partner. They were not promiscuous. But they also didn't rush into marriage because they were anxious to have sex (common in my much older siblings' friendships. More failed marriages in that graduated in the 50s group that married young to have sex than in my 60s group who mostly married later and had pre-marital sex.)
Don't jump into marriage. The author's comment that he and his wife wanted to "grow up together" sent chills down my spine. Marriage is for grown-ups - not for kids who still have to grow up.
Marry early
By Tom (not verified) on Tuesday, August 31, 2010The core article is right on point. It seems to me that couples postponing marriage are doing so for the wrong reasons---often somewhat selfish. Many of the petulant comments voiced on this blog are by those who want to tell the Catholic Church why they do not want to follow Church teaching instead of seeking the very best ways to live a Sacramental Marriage.
The "50's marriages" did much, much better than the "60's marriages"--when we became self-centered.
Statistically, (and reasonably)the divorce rate is much lower if couples have more education, if they follow the advice of their parents, if they avoid crushing debt,if they pray together, attend church together, participate in meaningful volunter activity together and use Natural Family Planning. (statistics)
Hu?
By Anonymous (not verified) on Tuesday, August 31, 2010"Statistically, (and reasonably)the divorce rate is much lower if couples have more education...if they avoid crushing debt..."
How can they have more education, avoid crushing debt and marry early?
I was married at 19, have 2
By Deanna (not verified) on Tuesday, February 8, 2011I was married at 19, have 2 master degrees and no debt, EVER, besides a mortgage. It takes hard work and dedication and self sacrifice. The longer people wait to get married the more selfish and self-centered they become because the only person they really have to ever consider is ME! I know many single people who give of themselves, but in the end, they still only have to really think about themselves.
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