Married Advice

October 31st, 2008 by admin

Many people are eager to give “reasons to get” married advice to their friends and family. Here is some “reasons not to get” married advice.

Wrong reason to get married advice #1

How eager are you “just to get married?” Has this eagerness made you feel love for unsuitable persons because you could get them?

Getting married is, and should be, a romantic and thrilling adventure. The excitement of getting ready, the wedding in which you are the center of attention, the thrill of establishing a new and intimate relationship with another person; these rightly have great appeal. When June comes and you see so many of your friends getting married, and there is someone special whom you like and who wants to marry you, it is quite a temptation! No wonder that under such circumstances some people feel that they are in love. If they are getting older they may be bombarded with “reasons to get married advice” from others who give married advice as freely as a handshake.

The danger with this “get married advice” is that such marriages may end up as “roller coaster” marriages. They are highly exciting at first and for a brief time. But the couple ends up at the bottom with a thrill which is past. Those who are rather lonely and hungry for love must be especially careful about this. The love which they think they feel toward a person may really be a love for the excitement of getting married. Even when there are other bases, this love for a thrill may be enough, in combination with other motives, to push us into a marriage which is not for the best. All of us need to watch out for this wrong kind of “get married advice” and who this married advice is coming from!

Wrong reasons to get married advice #2

Does the other person remind you strongly of some dear relative or friend whom you once loved? To what extent has this influenced your choice!

“And when I gazed into her eyes, then I knew,” whispered Phil. Phil was brought up by an Aunt Clara, whom he adored. Ada was about Aunt Clara’s height, and her gestures were strikingly similar. When she spoke, Phil heard the same soft, well-modulated voice which he had come to love as a child. No wonder that he was interested in Ada as soon as they had met. On their first date he noted around her eyes the same cute wrinkles he had loved in his aunt. And in Ada’s eyes was the same shade of greenish-blue.

To Phil it was love at first sight; a mysterious Act of God, who intended that they should marry. Actually, it was Phil’s love for his aunt which Ada’s similarities stirred up in Phil with overwhelming compulsion. Phil’s imagination did the rest. He naturally felt that Ada must have the same simple integrity, the same gentle patience and the same unselfish love as had Aunt Clara.

How could Phil know, or even believe that Ada was selfish, spoiled, and something of a cheat? Yet he did have sense enough to know that one must be especially careful about “love at first sight.” With the help of a wise counselor he began to see the reasons for his feelings. As he became aware of Ada’s physical resemblances to his aunt, and saw their relationship to his love, his feelings changed. Ada was no longer even mildly interesting to him.

Such extreme cases may be rare, but less extreme ones are common. Many young people have been very considerably influenced to choose one person rather than another because some look or gesture reminded them of a loved one. Have you considered the possibility of such influences in your choice? Again, don’t get pushed into something by “reasons to get married advice” from others.

Is anyone putting undue pressure on you to marry or giving you strong “get married advice”?

Do you feel that you must follow this “get married advice’ and hurry to get married, lest you be “left on the shelf?”

It is quite natural that your relatives, and especially your parents, should be interested in whom you marry and give you “get married advice”. It is proper that they should propose possibilities and, within reasonable limits, even to campaign for them. They will do it, anyway whether you like it or not. But do not let them, or anyone, push you into a marriage for which you are not ready with “get married advice”.

Above all, beware of the girl friend who tries to give you the impression that you have “led her on,” and that, therefore, it is now your duty to marry her. The main difference between altar and halter is H.

On the question of taking your opportunities while you have a chance, it is difficult to give wise advice. Certainly it is unwise to marry just because everyone else is doing it, and you want to be in the swim. Some people, too, are willing to accept almost anybody for fear that otherwise they may be left on the shelf.

On the other hand, some are so particular that they pass up, to their undying regret, the chance to marry really good people because they hope for some Prince Charming of their imaginations who will never come. That also is too bad. Do not let it happen to you. Be wise who you take “get married advise:” from.

Next post will have a few more “wrong reasons” to get married advice.

Technorati Tags: , ,

Posted in Marriage Builders

Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.

 
© 2010 Theme by Theme by sweetsp.com Powered by - | |