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Healingmilk t1_ja6qwt6 wrote

But marriage is over-romanticised and in the end it's just a contract and ticking a social checkbox of tradition. Why would you conclude he doesn't love you just because he doesn't want to marry you? You even listed the seemingly many things that are going good between you.

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Tato7069 t1_ja6qycn wrote

You're looking for a man that really really wants to get married? Lol... I would say most men need a bit of a push towards it. If you haven't really talked about how you feel about it seriously, more than casually mentioning it on a car ride, then immediately shutting yourself down when he didn't have the exact same opinion as you, you need to make it clear that it's important to you... your fuck up here is expecting him to take small talk from a first date, and a short car conversation as you telling him you seriously need something.

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Blue_Osiris1 t1_ja6rdd5 wrote

You two loving each other IS the only important thing. If you're looking for reassurance that he truly loves you, observe his actions over a long period of time. I can guarantee you there are plenty of married couples who treat each other like acquaintances most days out of the year.

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ShhhHesWatchingUs t1_ja6szu4 wrote

As a married man of 13 years so far, there have been months where i feel like im in a share house with my wife and kids, not a family home.

But on the reverse, there are many more months / years where there is obvious love in the house and those occasional months are usually during hectic periods of life (busy periods at work, Christmas, school holidays etc.) So the lack of "love" isnt because its not there, just that we arent taking the same amount of time to show it openly.

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izanamithekorn t1_ja6ujcx wrote

It seems to me that your main fuck up is threatening a relationship you are seemingly enjoying, based solely on the fact that he doesn't really agree with marriage.

If there are other things wrong then fair enough, but it seems like self sabotage on your part.

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pocomoonshine t1_ja6wxcr wrote

Marriage is an outdated concept. It's not romantic, it's a legal contract. It makes some people feel safe, but it actually does none of that effectively. It does not mean you will spend the rest of your life together. A verbal agreement that you intend to spend the rest of your life together is effectively the same thing. Equally valid. And equally unenforceable.

Marriage does not mean true love, no matter how you look at it. Its just language that implies true love, and the illusion or hope for true love for some people.

That said, you should be able to communicate freely with your partner about your values and work it out. What is true love? That is the question. He may truly love you, but is speaking in different terms.

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TreasonableBloke t1_ja6xu2k wrote

Listen to me, don't fuck up a good thing by confusing marriage with true love.

Marriage and love aren't the same thing. Plenty of people get married who don't love each other, and plenty of people love each other and don't get married.

It doesn't say anything about love on a marriage certificate.

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AllanfromWales1 t1_ja6z09s wrote

> I want someone who really loves me. Who opens up to me emotionally. Who wants to spend the rest of their life with me. I want someone I’m enamored with, that I want to marry.

Sorry to be harsh, but dream on. Relationships like that either don't happen at all, or the love element doesn't last, or is one-sided. You are far, far better off with:
> He marks off all the boxes, we have great communication, great sex, a great home life but a lot of times it feels like we’re just friends.

I speak as someone who's been in a relationship with my partner for the past 43 years, married for 36 of them, kids, grandkids. I love them, always have done, but in a practical way, not is a dreamy heads in the clouds way. Those people I know who had that kind of love, almost without exception ended up hurt. And in the exceptional cases, it developed into something more 'real'. And FWIW I, the man, pushed for the marriage after we'd had our daughter..

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rusty6899 t1_ja6z8an wrote

To be fair, at 24 I’d have said the same thing to my girlfriend about marriage but now I’m 33, 3 years married to her and I’d definitely be a big proponent of marriage. People change as they mature. That said, living together for a significant length of time without considering getting married is a bit suspect.

In terms of “practical or loving”, a loving relationship that isn’t practical isn’t going to last at all.

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bellesavage t1_ja73wul wrote

Overall the whole marriage thing is not your actual problem here. You have 2 problems. 1 is that you have put so much emphasis on a ceremony that it's clouding your ability to recognise that real love feels like friendship must of the time with a sprinkling of romance and sex to whatever degree is enough for both of you. So step back and ask yourself, if you got married tomorrow and nothing else in your relationship changed, would you want it?

The 2nd is a lot more important. You've said you want emotional vulnerability from your partner. That's a valid and important need. It's also one that many men have been trained out of. It takes emotional maturity to be able to openly share your feelings and experiences in a vulnerable way and it's a much more common trait in women than men because of how we're respectively socialised. It's a skill so he can absolutely learn it, but he has to want to for himself and you can't make him. That's the conversation you really need to have, that you want more emotional intimacy than you're currently sharing.

Be prepared that he may be unwilling or unable to meet that need. It would be very painful but it's better to know that early and cut your losses. No amount of friendship and ease will stop you from feeling disconnected if you don't share emotional intimacy. You can consider if it's something you can get in other relationships, e.g. with friends, but if it's important to you in your primary relationship you need to sort out whether that's possible with this guy.

If you decide its a deal breaker, be aware that you will go through a lot of men before you find one of the few who is capable and willing. Men are actively trained to avoid their emotions and most are not willing to do the work and face the hard feelings that are necessary to build that skill. Especially at 24 while they're brains are still finishing up developing, though your generation has grown up with a lot more exposure to emotional intelligence than previous generations so you've got better odds than older women. Wishing you the best, this is such an unpleasant experience to go through

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Synopia t1_ja768ti wrote

Unfortunately a ton of redditors are very immature about the idea of marriage, and in no way does this reflect real life.

Marriage is NOT a "piece of paper." Believe it or not, there is a commitment. Imagine having kids with someone you're not married to. Imagine trying to enter the hospital after they've been in an accident, but you're not next of kin.

For better or worse, society respects marriage. Saying "sorry, i cant attend the work dinner as my husband is waiting for me" is excusable, while "sorry my boyfriend is waiting for me" sounds immature to employers.

There are also tax benefits, housing and finance related benefits with loans, etc.

Right now, you guys are young. But if marriage is a deal breaker for you, then leave him. Hoping someone will change their mind after 3-5 years is wasted time and heartbreak.

And im seriously concerned with Gen Z if they think marriage is such a waste, that you should just throw all your standards out the window because "love is more important." lol right.

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smelliepoo t1_ja76lba wrote

Totally agree with this. Long term relationships should be more like a friendship with sprinkles. I think of it as glowing embers that glow gently for longer rather than a hot flame that burns out quickly.

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Qyro t1_ja77dep wrote

What you’ve described sounds like a loving relationship rather than a practical one. A practical relationship is like when friends agree to get together if they’re still single after X years, or a heterosexual marriage where one party is outwardly homosexual to avoid social stigma, or two people from different countries marrying for a green card. Your relationship ticks none of these boxes.

I’ve been married for 12 years, but my wife and I didn’t decide to get married as a symbol or declaration of our love for one another. It was a way of officialising our relationship in the eyes of the law, and an excuse to have a bit of a party. That’s all it was at the time, and 12 years later that’s how I still view it. Our love for one another hasn’t changed from before we got married. Our relationship is exactly the same now as it would’ve been if we decided marriage wasn’t worth it.

But you know what? She is my best friend. She is my roommate. That is love. Love isn’t about grand gestures, it’s about the pleasure you derive just from being together. It sounds like you still have that, so there’s absolutely nothing to worry about at all. You’re overthinking it and attributing the wrong value to what you have. Don’t fuck it up.

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wotmate t1_ja78a8w wrote

Lots of people don't believe in formal marriage. I've been with my SO for 8.5 years, we've got a kid, a house, and a dog together, and while we've talked about getting married, we're in no rush. We're functionally married, and we don't need a piece of paper from the government to formalise it.

​

ESPECIALLY after my first marriage ended in divorce after only two years.

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ixramuffin t1_ja78gul wrote

Just to give you another male perspective: I feel the same way about marriage as your boyfriend does, and I love my partner to bits. I would even argue that overly emphasising marriage is a big red flag, because to me that signals "I care more about the marriage than being together and loving each other".

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VideoGamesForU t1_ja78j2n wrote

" he thinks getting married is just a big party and signing a piece of paper and that it’s over romanticized " I mean it realistcally is. You got yourself a clever man. If you really want to do that he surely wouldnt mind doing you the favour though.

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M4NOOB t1_ja79lue wrote

I thought ya'll marry because of the tax benefit?

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Eulerious t1_ja7a1lg wrote

Well, the good news: this isn't a TIFU. You didn't fuck anything up today.

The bad news: this is a IAFU (I am fucked up). Because you think a loving relationship can only exist in the context of marriage and are willing to destroy a perfectly fine relationship over this wrong assumption.

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dsheroh t1_ja7arh9 wrote

Interestingly enough, all the things you listed as reasons to get married are practical benefits and have little or nothing to do with love, while OP is lamenting that she doesn't want a "practical" relationship.

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bigpunk157 t1_ja7avdz wrote

People would get properly married way less if tax and state benefits werent included. In many states, insurance is only shared with your spouse and kids. Marriage is the most practical loveless part of your relationship and to equate it otherwise with a testament of love is to misunderstand its purpose in a modern world.

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yumirow t1_ja7c4ey wrote

See, he's a dude. For him, marriage is only a financial liability. Sure you might never divorce him, but if you were to think about it eventually, the outcome would do everything but deter you from it. Not all men are willing to live with a damocles sword above their heads just for a pretty ceremony and rings to wear.

Now, you say this relationship is just practical, but is it a good relationship ? If it works why break it ? Because there's a chance that in the universe the perfect partner exists and that you would miraculously get him ? Cherish what you do have, instead of living in fantasies.

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Yisuscrais69 t1_ja7celd wrote

Girl, you’re confused as hell. Get some therapy pronto before you end up fucking this one up.

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nacari0 t1_ja7d8x7 wrote

As others have said u have a good thing going here, dont ruin it over different view of marriage

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Vamip89 t1_ja7f4al wrote

I almost lost my now wife because we got to the ten year mark and she asked what’s next we got a house a family will you marry me and I said no marriage is something I don’t want. However 4 months prior to this I had been out bought a ring and was waiting on our trip to Disneyland to propose. I managed to talk the doubts out of her and I played a big gamble and it payed off because 2 weeks after that conversation I got down on one knee and she said yes. I never really saw the whole thing with being married parents divorced multiple times etc however I seen how much she wanted it and i do not regret it at all one of the best days of my life

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Relikar t1_ja7fg08 wrote

OP my advice to you is to ignore everything that was said in your post on r/relationshipadvice. Stop worrying about the future and enjoy what you have now. Marriage is indeed an outdated formality that doesn't define a good relationship.

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firegirlaus t1_ja7fiay wrote

Love is not always big romantic gestures, and it often feels like an easy friendship. Romance is one thing but a deep lasting connection is another thing completely. Emotional intimacy is a very valid want, however, unfortunately many men have not been socialised in this to feel comfortable in doing so. Be careful because if you leave a good thing the grass is not always greener. It may take a long time to find a man who is actually willing to be vulnerable, and he may not have the other qualities this man does. Talk to him, express your feelings and see if he is willing to learn to open up to you

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Fcktbckt t1_ja7g0fb wrote

Why are you looking into marriage at 24? That seems a bit young for today, at least in my country. it’s not common thing until you hit 30.

marriage is 100% just a big party though, it’s more for families to get to know each other and bond

I think your definition of love is a bit naive, you can’t spend your whole life with someone and be enamoured them, that feeling will always fade, real love is more about dependability and whether or not you feel safe

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scalpingsnake t1_ja7gkdb wrote

Bro what is it with all these people talking about getting married, or having children in their early 20s I just do understand.

YOU LITERALLY SAID SEVERAL YEARS AGO YOU WERE READY MARRY SOMEONE LIKE MAYBE I DUNNO YOU ARE MOVING TOO FAST... like fuck even when you aren't in a relationship you are moving too fast.

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The-Red-Robe t1_ja7goyz wrote

OP didn’t get the answers she wanted and has ghosted her own post smh. So much immaturity going on here.

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TrypMole t1_ja7h29p wrote

Absolutely agree. Been together 22 years, married for 13 and the friendship is the important bit, plus you get great sex and all the other trimmings! Life together long term isn't a romantic whirlwind, practicality has to be an important part of that relationship. It sounds like your main problem is that you want a marriage (& a wedding) and it sounds like he doesn't.

This poster has Absolutely nailed it on the emotional intimacy so I have nothing to add there.

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Cerbera_666 t1_ja7hef1 wrote

I see women who are overly eager to get married as a red flag too, I show love in plenty of ways, and a contract isn't one of them. Divorce is messy and all too common, he's right to be wary of it.

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Malessar t1_ja7hn5o wrote

Listen to his wisdom. Many times I traded good people for this quest for hot passion and romanticised things, only to later realize it was a true mistake. The one who loves you and cares for you is the one who will always have your back, not the one you are driven mega absolutely crazy about.

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Cerbera_666 t1_ja7htlg wrote

Wouldn't surprise me at all if she was to get married, realise it's not all it's cracked up to be and she's still not happy with him, proceeding to completely fuck him over in divorce.

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Filcha t1_ja7ifhp wrote

I would give it some time. I things are going well, let it be for now. Many people are not ready to even consider marriage at 24. It is not at all unusual. I know my husband wouldn't have said he would never ever marry at 24. By the time I met him at 30, things were different.

It sounds like marriage is important to you, and that's fine. Give this guy some time. Give yourself some time to see if you really do love him, and you're just reacting to the disappointment at the moment.

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riddleloaf t1_ja7ih4p wrote

Girl, this IS a loving relationship. It sounds like you want someone who makes a big show out of getting married and makes sweeping gestures of romance, and he wants a loving relationship with a partner he considers his best friend.

A word of caution: the relationships are all about infatuation and grand gestures flame out pretty quickly. The ones based on being best friends are the ones that last.

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powerposepenguin t1_ja7jh6r wrote

Tbh I felt like moving in together had so much more impact on my day to day live than marriage. Do you expect anything to change after a wesding? For me it definitely didn't, and that's awesome and just the way we wanted it. Because the relationship should be good enough for the rest of your life to begin with. Just saying it out loud to a lot of people you know isn't meant for everyone. I never liked attention in my life and I would shit my pants at the idea of a wedding.

It sounds like you are afraid that he isn't as committed as you are. Just because he doesn't like the idea of a wedding doesn't mean hes not committed though. Take a step back, and try to analyse what you feel.

Is it the fear of his commitment? Is the rest of the relationship crumbling down or still strong? Do you want to marry him, or do you mostly want to get married?

I hope you'll figure it out! Maybe he's ready to spend the rest of his life with you, he just doesn't show it the same way as you!

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tosernameschescksout t1_ja7k2eg wrote

Whoa whoa whoa, you have sex?
That's not a "practical" relationship. It's romantic, emotional, and physical.

Marriage is basically just a ceremony, a ritual. Fuck it.
Unless you're talking LEGAL MARRIAGE, which is a legal arrangement with lots of fine print and legalese about assets and how they are shared, divided, etc.

The paperwork, the ritual, what is it? What do you really want? And why is it SOOOOO incredibly symbolic to you? Notice its not symbolic to a lot of other people?

People get married, people get divorced. The difference is that people who are actually in love stick together. You said that you want ACTUAL love because he's supposed to want to marry you. Hello? You're having sex and stuff, that's love. That's actual. That's more actual than marriage. Marriage does NOT make that more actual. Not one bit.

What you really want to know is if he's ready to go long term with you and spend the rest of his life together. So ask him that, specifically. Marriage is NOT part of that conversation. Period. Find out what you need to know without getting confused about it.

He's young, he's going to say stupid stuff without knowing the depth of it, like the marriage talk you had. You need to talk to him and explain point by point, what's serious, how serious, why serious. Also explain that he needs to be on a commitment path that has some kind of end point and destination, like being able to say how ready he is and at what time.

Try replacing the word marriage with something along the line of, "Are you ready to put a baby in me, because I will leave your ass if that doesn't happen within X years or if you're not continually on a path toward making that happen. It matters. Period."

Then give him lots of time to think about it if he hasn't already.

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SirVanyel t1_ja7kp6f wrote

And for good reason. How many people go to marriages to either:

1: Drink on someone else's dime

2: to inflict their own beliefs onto the couple

Weddings aren't for the bride and groom, if they were, they wouldn't send the couple in debt.

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OddMeansToAnEnd t1_ja7lfij wrote

"Hi I have everything I could want and check off all the boxes but I'm not happy cuz I want it all!"

Bro he is opening up to you and it is emotionally, it just doesn't fit your own narrative in your head. You rehearse the scenario playing out over and over again in your head this specific way, so you're now upset because it isn't that. All I hear in this is me me Me me!! Absolute zero consideration for how he feels, his own perspective, accepting him as he is etc. you are immature and childish and now you're pushing him away becuse you're not getting what you want. Grow up or let him go so he can make someone who actually cares about their relationship and not just themselves happy.

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Nexlore t1_ja7lv9r wrote

True love is not a thing, stop believing in fairy tales. The head over heels in love feeling is an adrenaline response, that's why you have "fight flight or freeze" happening when you're trying to ask out a crush as a teenager.

Once you become comfortable with someone your love will turn into a more compassionate and nurturing love. If it doesn't you're likely in a one sided relationship and constantly on edge because you are unsure if they feel the same way.

As others have said, marriage is over romanticized....and if nothing else there are tax and social benefits (you can make medical decisions for your partner if they are not capable, etc) to getting married. Possibly bring up those practical aspects if it comes to it.

As others have said, don't ruin a good thing by getting stuck in your head.

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lordytoo t1_ja7mat6 wrote

Listen youngling. As someone through it all. Dont confuse love and marriage. Fuck marriage. It really is a shitty paper. Getting a divorce is so much harder. I found out the hard way. Seems like you found a sensible partner. Dont fuck it up.

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superjudgebunny t1_ja7mnsb wrote

I was going to post something similar, with a little more.

Some guys don’t like to initiate. I’m that way, I don’t like the standard way of dating. Most of my relationships were me being pursued. I don’t think that’s a problem at all. Different? Yes, doesn’t make the relationship any less.

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eathquake t1_ja7mooy wrote

So big issue i am seeing is that u r focused on the wedding and he lacks interest. This is followed by him not being enotionally open.

As for the wedding, he has a valid point with his concerbs. As men, we r normally screwed in any kind of divorce and short of some tax stuff and easier for children, we dobt really get much out of it that we couldnt get with just a dedicated dating relationship. His concerns may seem disheartening but remember that if he married u and somethinf happen he could b set to lose alot if u chose to b bitter in divorce. That level of risk is massive.

Next is the emotional state. It sucks he doesnt share his emotions but it is important to consider how men r socialized. We r taught early in life to toughen up (or man up depending on prefeted term) and deal with whatever happens. We r taught that being emotionally vulnerable is a sign of weakness to b avoided. He may have had previous relationships that burned him the moment he shown weakness. Maybe he feels embarressed or guilty trying to share, thinking he is just burdening u with his problems unnecessarily. U can attempt to reassure him in general but i can almost guarentee that, if he is uncomfortable with the marriage idea, the more u push for marriage the less he will b open. I wont give a what u should do cause i dont have enough info to do that but in general try to keep their perspective in mind and if u dont understand do as u have and ask questions. They will tell u, probably quickly, what they would prefer u do and u have to decide if it is worth it for u.

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jdfree1987 t1_ja7nhgm wrote

This is a difficult issue. You say the sex is great and he’s a good friend, I can’t think of a better set up for a long term relationship. I married my best friend and couldn’t be happier, but it sounds like he isn’t fulfilling some of your needs emotionally. Believe people when they tell you who they are. He is telling you he isn’t overly emotional and doesn’t care about marriage. I would believe him. He is not going to suddenly wake up and change.

Communication is key. 24 is also really young for a man is this day and age. He may not want to think about marriage for a while. Or maybe he will. Communicate with him, not Reddit.

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DryBarracuda40 t1_ja7nlxi wrote

It's important to remember that it's okay to have doubts and to question whether this relationship is right for you. It's also okay to want someone who is emotionally open and wants the same things as you, including marriage.

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iAmBalfrog t1_ja7onuk wrote

As someone who's been to weddings of 200 people and also 8 people, the wedding is typically not for you and your partner. It's usually a large waste of money to spend 3-4 minutes talking with relatives you didn't bother to speak to for the last few years.

The most intimate wedding I went to was the incredibly small event with 8 of us, we all sat and spoke over a meal, we enjoyed the day. There was no white dress, no groomsmen or bridesmaids, a cake made by the bride herself. It was a true "showing of love" between two people.

I would question why you feel a "large display of love" in a public setting is necessary. Fiscally speaking, weddings are disastrous, it usually kills off the more responsible outlooks of home deposits or preparing for a child. It is a lot of faff. It's akin to a very expensive valentines day, if your partner thinks just showing love on significant days is what they should do, this is a red flag, if they're willing to show love and be kind and compassionate without the need for a public event this is a win and something to be thankful for.

It feels as if you've internalised some big day in a white dress to constitute love, it is an old notion which had it's part in society as it gave some legal rights to women who didn't have them in the event of the husband dying. As to why you feel it necessary feels more alien to me than him not wanting one.

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ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7ptsz wrote

I think that’s beautiful. Backyard wedding are actually pretty common these days.

I’m not religious so if I ever get married, I think I’d want it to be in a beautiful outdoor location rather than a church.

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Mother_Pain t1_ja7q3qw wrote

Im with my man since 1998... not married, 2 kids, we're having a good life.. we are ''engaged'' (Meaning we just gave each other a ring) aand that it... we dont need the stupid paper to know that we love each other.... So if he loves you and you lovee him, why screw it all for debts and a paper ,,, you dont need that to prove your love

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ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7qe54 wrote

Traditionally, weddings are paid for at least in part by the couples families. Unfortunately not every family is able to pay.

I think weddings are definitely over priced and there’s still some societal pressure. However, people in the younger generations are definitely changing the way we do things.

Smaller weddings, non traditional weddings, and eloping are all becoming more and more common. I would never force or coerce a partner into a we’d ceremony they don’t want to participate in.

Personally, if someone came and was being a nuisance, I’d kick them out no problem.

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zhibr t1_ja7qwc1 wrote

She's bought the "true love" myth from the romance media and industry and doesn't understand the problems are caused by the unrealistic expectations placed by it.

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ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7rl88 wrote

He comforted me last night without knowing why I was crying and the way he was so kind and loving reminded me why I love him. I’d take all the wonderful things he is than risk it all in a gamble again. Thank you.

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ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7s8cw wrote

I don’t think that’s necessarily the case. Plenty of marriages are full of unhappy people, so it’s not as if I believe getting married automatically means a fairytale ending. But knowing what wanting to marry someone feels like, I just want him to be capable of feeling that way towards me, even if not now, in the future. It upset me so because I love him. I plan to talk to him again tonight.

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ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7si3d wrote

I think that’s a bit presumptuous. We are happy together and this is the most stable, healthy relationship I’ve ever been in and I do take marriage seriously. Your comment sounds like you believe I’m naive, have been reading the wrong side of the internet, or you’ve had a bitter divorce yourself.

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ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7sxqm wrote

Thank you for sharing, and I’m happy to hear you’re in a great relationship.

It’s not that I value marriage above all else in our relationship. Being together, caring about each other, and showing each other love in little ways are important. But it is something I would eventually want. It’s the ultimate commitment.

1

ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7tgn4 wrote

I think it all depends on the relationship. If when two people start dating, they have kids or are older, they may be inclined to get married quicker. Younger people are more likely to wait until they are 27-29 to get married. But as long as each partner is consenting, and there’s a healthy happy relationship there, I don’t think it’s up to outsiders to decide if marriage is right for them. I am realistic in that I know how important it is to consider all factors including that marriage is a binding contract. Divorce is ugly. Premarital counseling is important.

1

ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7umok wrote

But I don’t want it to be just a favor or doing the motions. I want someone to love me enough to want to marry me. What if he never gets there?

Don’t get me wrong, I know legally what marriage is. It’s a very serious contract. It’s a major commitment, and I would never take it lightly.

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NoFail9553 t1_ja7v2c7 wrote

To be honest with you, at 24 years old, I think you're too young to be thinking about marriage. You both should be enjoying each other's company and seeing where this leads in the future. For now, enjoy life and don't think too deeply about all of that.

If you guys are together after a few years and you both are still feeling differently about what you both want in the long term, then that's when you should be concerned. But if the relationship is in fact a loving one, then you both would come to a consesus that would work for both of you.

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firegirlaus t1_ja7w3gi wrote

Good luck! My husband is not super romantic, but we are best friends. I used to hate it but let him know how it made me feel. he doesn’t get it but understands it’s important to me. He now makes an effort, I know it’s just for me, but it’s so wonderful that he will try just to make me happy.

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bigpunk157 t1_ja7wtop wrote

The practical benefits are pretty big, at the very least in the US. Not being married actually is a major detriment to families financial stability and health.

This is not to say you shouldn't marry who you love, but it is absolutely about practicality, stability, and settling down a core for the rest of your life. That may seem transactional, but that's what happens when you take a covenant between God and Man and screw over people if they don't have this agreement with another person.

Marrying my wife was an unbelievably large boon to our lives, and we filled out a bunch of gaps in our life right there. Before, we were living on the edge for years while I provided and went to school full-time. We plan on having the actual ceremony later on, when we do want to have a costly celebration of our lives. Otherwise, it IS just a piece of paper, much like a college degree.

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riddleloaf t1_ja7x9jl wrote

Yeah exactly this. This post screams “I’m 20 and only ever had Disney princess expectations of love”. This line of thinking is super toxic for so many reasons, but one of the big ones is sweeping romantic gestures only set you up for failure. You’re always going to compare everything to the NRE (new relationship energy) or “The Wedding”. Everything in comparison will seem like your partner is failing. Love isn’t the wedding. It isn’t the infatuation you felt the first year, either. It’s the little moments where your partner makes you snort-laugh at a silly joke he told. It’s the serene walk you took together with your dog. It’s discovering a show you love and getting to tuck in and watch it together after a long day. It’s being able to enjoy each others company while doing separate things.

Love isn’t infatuation, or constant impressive gestures. Love is simple, reliable, and cozy.

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LambKyle t1_ja7x9vy wrote

Premarital counseling? I legit have never known a single person to do that. You go to couples therapy when you are struggling. If you are going to couples therapy before your married, that seems like the relationship isn't working.

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ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7xph4 wrote

I guess maybe it did make me wonder if he really cared about me… which is stupid, I’m such an over thinker anyways.

I don’t know yet if I want to marry him. It’s too early in my opinion to make that call. But if everything goes well, then hopefully yes he’s the one I want to marry. We moved in together because we were spending most nights together so it just made sense.

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LambKyle t1_ja7y18j wrote

I always hated the idea of marriage. Seemed utterly pointless. I was with my girlfriend for 8 years before I proposed. You are putting way too much emphasis on marriage. It's literally nothing but a party.

It's for your family to get to know each other. That's it. Marriage won't save your relationship. Marriage won't change anything. Literally not a thing will change. 2 weeks after your marriage will be the exact same as 2 weeks before your marriage. I don't know whta you are expecting, but that's not the solution.

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adapt2 t1_ja7ykqw wrote

Marriage is totally A-ok and respectable. A wedding on the other hand? Total shit show that is only conducted to soothe the ego of many. It seems to me that he has a problem with the latter but not the former. You need to relax and enjoy your relationship. Let the chips fall where they may.

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OddMeansToAnEnd t1_ja7yzr2 wrote

Here's a question for you.., how sad would the world be if the only great proclamation of love was marriage and nothing else? To limit oneself and one's own love and happiness to the confines of what makes a decent marriage? It sounds as if you're asking for disaster before it even begins.

You should want him to want to marry you, and to want to marry you when he's ready. Not because you're essentially putting an ultimatum upon him. It sounds like, through your own words, he's doing things right and giving you just about everything you need to have a healthy relationship. You're now sabotaging it because you failed to express your own beliefs about marriage up front. If this is how you really felt than that should have been your lead. "I expect marriage." Not "how do you feel About marriage?" As if it's an open discussion, Then get upset it doesn't match your own feelings.

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ZeroRozuMagika t1_ja7z36w wrote

We would both like a smaller wedding. Weddings are expensive. I would love that, with a wedding dress I made myself. I want that display of affection, party and all. But it’s only real and meaningful to me if it’s with someone with whom you have a healthy happy relationship.

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powerposepenguin t1_ja80ezk wrote

Sounds like you are definitely in a loving relationship then, you two could maybe talk about love language. The way that you feel loved and the way you show your love to him and visa versa. Either way I think you can figure that out as the foundation of your relationship sounds pretty solid :)

Another tip could be that you can write down what you want to hear from him? That he is looking for someone in his life that he might spend the rest of his life with. Not yet, but let him say it out loud that it's just the marriage part he doesn't like. He probably does see you as a potential life partner, even though you're both not ready to decide that.

And overthinking doesn't have to bad! Makes you a critical thinker, less likely of doing something impulsive. Shows you're smart too.

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VideoGamesForU t1_ja82ir8 wrote

I mean if he doesnt jump from joy...maybe he just doesnt like the idea of wasting money? Have you ever thought that maybe he is content with how things are and he doesnt need a contract for that? Almost all of your posts are about your feelings. Not sure why you are so obsessed with that idea. He seems pretty normal.

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iAmBalfrog t1_ja84lb8 wrote

It's not so much doing it for financial gain, but they typically don't have as large a financial risk.

Now this isn't inherently in the wrong, women do give up opportunities typically to become a SAHP. But there are a lot more stories of men going into debt to fund alimony than the other way round.

There's also plenty of high profile stories where it's hard to believe that say MacKenzie Scott would have earnt $38.3billion had she not been in a relationship with Jeff Bezos, yet marrying him and later divorcing him netted her that worth.

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iAmBalfrog t1_ja85bs2 wrote

In your post you haven't listed a single negative thing this man is doing outside of having a progressive view on weddings. You can ask any number of married men and women whether 10-15 years later butterflies still exist daily. He seems like a relatively nice guy, you seem to be set on a wedding, he seems to be okay with marriage but thinks a wedding is a public display for what he thinks should be private.

Neither of you are in the wrong for having a preference, but I doubt he would break up with you for making an off handed comment, whereas that seems to be your logical go to. Hence the large amount of comments disagreeing with you.

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jdfree1987 t1_ja8cecl wrote

Yeah, that’s rough. I personally got married after three years with my wife. We moved in together after 1 year. If she changed her mind after moving in together and said she had no interest in marriage I would not have wanted to continue dating long term cause marriage is important to me. You deserve another conversation about your future wants. You should think clearly about what you want. Then, give him another chance to make his opinion on marriage known, believe him. Don’t expect him to change. That will only lead to a worse situation.

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Nexlore t1_ja9ox8x wrote

Why do you believe that he doesn't? What does it mean to truly love someone?

It just seems as if marriage doesn't have the meaning to it that it does for you.

Marriage is an obligation, that puts pressure on people and can end relationships regardless of how much those individuals are in love. Furthermore, there are responsibilities and societal expectations that come along with the institution of marriage. If not for the responsibility as a surrogate decision maker in the event of emergency or incapacitation and the tax benefits, I'm not sure I would care about marriage myself. The relationship between me and my partner is not defined by how society references us.

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powerposepenguin t1_jaa3z78 wrote

Jeez in what time are you living? The sixties? Woman are financially independent for ages now and even make more at a younger age then man. Your idea of society might be what you heard from celebrities drama or of women after marriage, when they decide to work less after having a kid. It's still very commen as a women to be pressured to work less than the husband to take care of the kids, which has been proven in many studies that its killing for salary growth

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Synopia t1_jaa51d6 wrote

She doesnt WANT a common law marriage. She wants a traditional one and everyone came on here and invalidated her feelings.

It's okay to want a traditional marriage. I have no idea why we keep trying to tell women that it's "wrong" or "wasteful" to want that in western culture. You can get a courthouse wedding and it's still traditional. You can do it in your backyard. But telling someone "LOL shut up its just paper" is untrue and awful.

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Synopia t1_jaa5aeo wrote

She is lamenting the fact that her boyfriend never wants to get married. Is she a bit naive about love? Maybe. She's 24.

But my comment was to prove to all the redditors that despise marriage that it's actually okay and practical to like marriage too. It should be a deal breaker in any relationship.

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iAmBalfrog t1_jabwfqv wrote

According to Census figures (from Forbes), of the 400,000 people in the US receiving Alimony, 3 percent are male, yet 40 percent of households are headed by female breadwinners. This implies that either divorce courts are sexist towards men, or we see more divorces between poorer females and richer males, or in my example, people with less to lose and something to gain.

I don't like the above statistics, i'm not happy with the above statistics, but it's the world we live in as of today. I agree theres been great strives towards gender equality, but we aren't there yet. Nothing you've said disagrees with the fact that these women have less to lose and something to gain.

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Relikar t1_jactekh wrote

You're doing exactly what her boyfriend is talking about. Romanticizing it.

Also, I didn't say anything about what she wants. I simply said that a common law marriage negates every justification you had for getting married. In the eyes of the law marriage is purely ceremonial.

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