Okay, so I've been wondering about something & I wanted to hear you guys opinions.
My boyfriend & I have been together for five years & we are both twenty one. I love him, I'm in love with him & there is no one else I'd rather be with. We're still young so we don't really talk about marriage but here & there we do say things like "when we get married..." & stuff like that. The other day when we were together we were talking about weddings & how my culture's weddings differ from his & he said he'd want to get married at a court house because it doesn't cost a lot. Then he said or he'd want to get married on an island & only our close relatives would be invited, like his mom & my mom. I know I want to marry him in the future & I've never straight up asked him "do you wanna marry me" but I think, well, if he's been in a relationship this long with me doesn't that obviously mean something? Like apparently he wants a future with me if he's been by my side for five years now? But then again I think, just because we've been together for so long doesn't mean marriage is definite, you know?
So my question is, do you guys think that when a couple has been together for so long that it means marriage is in the future? Are people in long relationships because they want to get married eventually? Ugh, in my head I know what I'm trying to ask but I can't seem to get it out the way I want it to but I guess these questions will do. Haha. Thanks for reading this & all opinions are appreciated!
In my case, the reason why I needed a nudge to ask her to marry me (and it really was more a mutual decision) was because it simply didn't occur to me on its own. I felt like I was still a very young guy (I've always felt younger than I am) and that marriage just wasn't in my immediate future. I was also pretty comfortable with our relationship as it was, and didn't feel a great push to change things.
When she said "I won't be your girlfriend forever" it got me thinking seriously about whether I WANTED it to be forever, and the more I thought about it the more I came to realize that I did. This was someone I loved very much, who I would be pleased and proud to call my wife, who I shared much in common with. We shared a common morality and ideals. I knew she would be a wonderful mother. We appreciated each others' sense of humor. We had great sex. We had problems, but we could deal with them. I married her and have never regretted it.
These are the kinds of things a guy will start thinking about when the idea of marriage becomes a reality instead of an abstraction. It seems to me that the two of you have been talking about WEDDINGS, which is very, very different from talking about MARRIAGE. In order to find out whether the two of you really will make it for the long term, you need to think about how you'll be after the honeymoon. You'll need to talk about how you'll support yourselves and live independently, how many children you want and how you'll raise them, where you will live and work and go to church, and what's really important to you in the long run. You'll need to think about the joys that come during all of your lives yet to come, and whether you can live with this guy for sixty-plus years without wanting to kill him.
When you're talking about THAT stuff, then you're talking about marriage. Until then, you're just in a long-term relationship. If you can't sit down and discuss what will really happen when you share your lives together, then one or both of you isn't ready for marriage - and if that's the case after five years, you probably never will be. [ Xenolan's advice column | Ask Xenolan A Question ]
icey0990 answered Wednesday April 11 2007, 12:12 am: Heyy thats a really long time..and yes i think there is a good chance marriage with him is in your future. some People date for a verrry long time before getting married. my parents dated for seven years, i have an aunt who has been with the same guy for maybe 5 years, i have a friend whos parents just got married after 13 years of being together..so it varies on the future plans, if you both truly feel you are right for each other,
this guy is sticking around for a longg time..and its not like he doesnt want a commitment,..because you two have been together for so long..so dont worry..hes been around for a verry long time..i dotn see him going anywhere anytime soon. and after being together 5 years, i would say marriage is very possible. [ icey0990's advice column | Ask icey0990 A Question ]
lizzielovesyou answered Tuesday April 10 2007, 8:46 am: well it dosnt nessasarly mean that marrige is in the future but there is probably a 90 percent chance that it could be if you really love this guy you shouldnt be afraid to ask him anything and the same for him.so ask him say something like"i know this is akward but do you want to marry me in the future or are you not sure yet?"well you can mix it up and say whatever you want.you sound like you guys really love each other so dont be afraid to say anything.
let me know how it all works out
lots of love,lizzie [ lizzielovesyou's advice column | Ask lizzielovesyou A Question ]
Sabine answered Tuesday April 10 2007, 1:53 am: All of this depends on a basic question: are you right for each other? Are you a good couple? Do you have plans for 'somedays' together beyond possibly, maybe, tenitively making plans to someday explore the possibility of perhaps getting married or not? Are you living together? Are you compatible sexually, house-wise, and future-wise? Are your family plans the same (kids/no kids, apartment/house, travel/settle down, etc)? Twenty-one is young to get married. That being said, here's an anecdote. I met someone when I was barely 19. He was almost 20. We dated for 2 1/2 years before I told him "I'm not going to be your girlfriend forever." We started looking at rings and were engaged within 6 months. Then we were married on the 5 year anniversary of our first date. We're about to celebrate our 10th wedding anniversary.
Young men sometimes wait for the right time to get engaged. They wait for everyone around them to be married, so it won't feel so odd. They wait for career success or to finish school. Sometimes we have to tell them just how much longer we're willing to wait. With my husband, it wasn't that I wanted to be married right away, but I wanted to know that he was committed to that 'someday' as well. Decide what you need out of the relationship and ask for it.
Dork answered Tuesday April 10 2007, 1:35 am: not all people are interested in getting married. i would say a great majority are, but some people just think that you don't need a title to prove your love to people and that actions and words are much stronger than titles. people aren't always in long term relationships to get married. everything is an experience and that makes everything practice for something else. just because someone is in a long relationship doesn't mean that they want to get married, maybe they just want the experience of a long term relationship and/or will end up changing their mind and wanting to or actually get married. [ Dork's advice column | Ask Dork A Question ]
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