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Valkyrie? Dominant? Niiiiice.:) |
well thanks guys for all of your opinions and ideas. i dont really know..he jokes about it but well see! we are pretty serious, even though its only been about 5 months. the kicker is that next sunday we are going to florida for a week. technically, with my parents, but we will basically just be by ourselves the whole week. yes, i stay with him 4 or 5 nights a week anyway...but this week its gonna be nothing but me and him...so maybe that will be some kind of make it or break it deal! lol. who knows! i was just curious in general. it seems like people i know move in with boyfriends way early (like 2 or 3 months into it) or way late/never at all in a relationship...just like with the "i love you" thing, i know everyones different, but its always interesting to hear how other people are! :)
roxydiva |
Something to think about:
They've done a lot of studies on couples who lived together before marriage. They've found that couples who lived together before marriage have a 50% higher divorce rate than those who didn't. Read about it in both TIME and Cosmo magazine. They did give the reasons behind it in the articles but I can't remember. |
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Whatever works for the couple I guess... |
Here's a good article on cohabitation.
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At Discovery Health, they have an article on the top 10 myths of marriage.
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I wouldn't recommend living together if you aren't planning to get married. I've seen those situations end badly.
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My pastor said that one would go to hell if one shacks up with a girl/boyfriend.
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Living together will not increase your chance of divorce. It will NOT ruin your marriage afterwards. Why the higher rates? People who live together have more socially liberal views. People who have socially liberal views are more likely to be open to the idea of divorce. Let's review. Socially Liberal Views --- more likely to be --- okay with living together. Socially Liberal Views --- more like to be --- oKay with divorce. It all depends on the people involved If it's a good relationship then living together can be a wonderful thing. You'll learn to enjoy each more every day. You will be extremely happy. If it is not a good relationship .... welll.... you know. Don't let people scare you with statistics or anecdotes. You know your relationship and only you will know whether living together is right for you. Also, you'll need to talk to your boyfriend. What does living together mean to him? What does it mean to you? What are the expectations involved? Mr. Kappaloo and I moved in together 1 year and 4 month after knowing/dating eachother. We were not engaged, we are not engaged. We started living together knowing that we would not get engaged during our university career, and that living together did not mean we would get married right away or anytime soon. We had clear expectations about what living together meant for our relationship, and what it would not mean for our relationship. We also knew that living together would not be all sunshine and bliss and that those would not mean that we didn't love eachother any less. My mother gave me the best advice: "There are time you may not like your signifigant other. That does not mean you don't love him. Loving him is working through those times." We knew that serious issues might arise and we would have to deal with those as they did. As for divorce, I will not divorce my husband when I marry unless there is absolutely no other choice. But I really don't see this happening for me. Why? I know that relationships take work, and I will work on my relationship everyday to ensure its health. That is one of my most important values... and Mr. Kappaloo shares it. Wow. I'm sorry guys. This was a bit of a rant. I just hate when people slam living together. It's my lifestyle and it's my choice, and when I see blanket conclusions put on it I do take it personally. (Some of you Christians might understand how this feels). As much as you might not like to admit it... living together can work when the people are right and they work at it. I do intend on getting married... but food for thought: I have and aunt and an uncle who have been in cohabitating relationships (not to eachother) for over 20 years each. That's better than a LOT of marriages. Edited because I dropped a lot of 's's |
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Maybe you could get a roomate if the economical issues are a concern? Paying half price is better than paying full price for a place that you spend little time at. :p |
I shacked up with GPBoy the summer after my freshman year and his first senior year of college for a few months. He was subletting an apartment in the town where I was taking summer classes, which was an hour from my parents' house. I stayed there 3-4 nights a week because it made more sense than staying at my house and spending all that money on gas and wasting time driving back and forth. It worked out really well for us because we knew that we could definitely handle each other, but it was an experience, since it was my first time living anywhere but the dorms or my parents house. I think I would have moved in with him my senior year of college and my parents were planning on it :eek: but I wanted to spend this year "on my own" to get acclimated to the city first. It definitely made our relationship stronger.
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I guess we have different views of living together. When I say cohabitation I see a very thought out, planned relationship where the two people move in together with clear expectations and commitments. I don't agree with shot-gun move-ins because they are just as unlikely to succeed than shot-gun marriages. Why don't we advise people against marriage then? Because we know that every marriage isn't a shot-gun marriage. I'm just asking for the same considerations for cohabitation. (cohabitation for 34 months and still going strong) |
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So, because gay couples, couples who choose not to get married because they'll lose their deceased spouse's benefits if they marry, and others, because they lack a sheet of paper signed by a Justice of the Peace, have no commitment? Marriage is not the end-all and be-all of human relationships.
I lived w/ Mr Munch for a while. It made our relationship so much stronger, because we saw each other through so many difficulties (personal and family health problems, financial issues, etc). Yes, we had a few arguments that we wouldn't have had if we had chosen not to live together until later, and we know how to handle the other in situations like that. We came into the situation KNOWING that we weren't just "playing house." Since I'm pretty much used to living in the city, we're going to move in together at the end of this school year. :) We both know that we're going into this with the utmost care and circumspection--a far cry from the "shot-gun" moveins that so many of us are referring to. |
Mr. Ginger and I were only dating 4 months when I moved in with him... the decision was made after we'd been dating for two.
Suprising for such a 'conservative' gal, hey? I'm so glad we made the decision. We're getting married next September and I can't imagine doing so without having lived with him beforehand. I think everyone who has said it's up to the individuals involved is right though. |
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