Pre-Marriage Counseling

January 22nd, 2011 by admin

Pre Marriage Counseling
By Ken Marlborough

Pre-marriage counseling is a psychological counseling given to prospective wives and husbands before marriage. It plays an important role in building healthy marriages. Many marriage studies and researches have shown that pre-marriage counseling helps reduce the possibility of divorce. Couples who attend pre-marriage counseling classes are able to better overcome challenges and difficulties. Pre-marriage counseling sessions create an awareness of marital issues and problems that might occur in marital relationship. Pre-marriage counseling also assists people in determining if they are fully ready for marriage. Counseling sessions range from two or more meetings to relatively long discussions.

Religious counselors commonly give pre-marriage counseling. Pastoral counselors provide spiritual as well as psychological resources to improve communication among couples. Pastoral pre-marriage counseling programs are designed to assist the couple in building a biblical understanding and foundation for their married life.

Religious institutions, colleges and other educational institutions, non-profit organizations, and professional marriage counselors offer pre-marriage counseling courses. Counseling courses generally cover topics such as identifying strength and growth areas, developing conflict resolution skills, intimacy and sexuality issues, values and beliefs, setting up family goals, personality types, family origin issues, role relationships, communication skills, marriage expectations, children and parenting issues, and, the most important of all, financial issues. In addition to the above, pre-marriage counseling courses share group experiences, and encourage reading and homework activities. These activities help couples build a solid foundation for their life. Pre-marriage counseling programs are also offered online. A number of online pre-marriage counseling programs present a wedding information packet to the couple in the beginning.

Before choosing a pre-marriage counselor, check his certification, educational background, professional associations, and training. Also, check whether he has experience with the job, because that can be an important factor. Marriage Counseling provides detailed information on Marriage Counseling, Christian Marriage Counseling, Family Marriage Counseling, Free Marriage Counseling and more. Marriage Counseling is affiliated with Marriage Problems.

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Prepare for Marriage

January 14th, 2011 by admin

Prepare for Your Marriage, Not Just the Wedding
By Susanne Alexander

With literally hundreds of details to remember in preparing for a wedding, you might forget a very important step: marriage preparation, a research-proven step that contributes to lasting marriages. When we are madly in love and dreaming of special dresses and wedding music, it can be easy to think that marriage will be a perpetual honeymoon, filled with constant happy moments, romantic days and nights, and light-hearted fun. Actually, your marriage can be great and filled with joyful times...with some preparation, key skills, and realistic expectations. Marriage education and preparation workshops, counseling/coaching, and books can be a great pre-marriage present from your family too!

Here are some options to consider:

- Engage in great in-depth discussions, using books that provide questions for couples to ask one another; such as, "All-in-One Marriage Prep", "365 Questions for Couples," or "The Hard Questions." These types of discussions strengthen your friendship and ensure you're compatible. Important keys areas to discuss thoroughly before marriage include money, children/parenting, religion, family relationships, roles and responsibilities, and more. If you're having difficulty with the discussions, you might consider asking a married couple to mentor you and assist you with the process.

- Know the character strengths that are important to you in a partner, and ensure your partner has them, so you are confident your marriage will be on a firm foundation. Character qualities that are vital in marriage include truthfulness, trustworthiness, faithfulness, courtesy, respect, helpfulness, and more. For more information on this topic, see "Pure Gold: Encouraging Character Qualities in Marriage (Second Edition)," (ISBN: 0-9726893-5-4)

- Assess your relationship/couple strengths and growth areas with the assistance of a trained counselor or relationship coach so that you know what skills you may need to continue developing as a couple.

- Learn vital communication skills that will have you avoid conflict and fighting with one another and reach effective agreements instead.

- Assess the activities you do together leading up to the wedding and choose to participate in ones that will strengthen your friendship and assist you to know one another well. Great choices include performing community service, spending time with friends and family members, practicing spiritual activities, or working on a project together.

- Develop a list together of your shared commitments for your marriage. You can include whatever practices are most important to you in sustaining your marriage, such as weekly dates, praying with one another, enjoying time with children, continuing your education, treating one another with courtesy and love, deciding how you will settle disagreements, and so on.

- Prepare a list of your assets and debts, and create a post-wedding budget for your lives together. Agree on how you will handle your money during your marriage. Money can be a key area for marital conflict, and you may prevent some of it with advance planning.

So, here's what there is to remember...you are preparing for a wonderful wedding day, an event that marks your transition into marriage, something you want to last a lifetime. Preparing for the marriage is a great investment of time in your future.

Websites, such as [http://www.lifeinnovations.com] can direct you to research-based, professional services.

Copyright 2010 Susanne M. Alexander

Susanne M. Alexander is a Relationship and Marriage Coach, as well as author of All-in-One Marriage Prep: 75 Experts Share Tips and Wisdom to Help You Get Ready Now > Can We Dance? Learning the Steps for a Fulfilling Relationship, and Pure Gold: Encouraging Character Qualities in Marriage. She is president of Marriage Transformation LLC ( http://www.marriagetransformation.com ).

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How Suitable Are You to Each Other?

November 9th, 2010 by admin

Seventy years ago, when Harry Allen and Susie Robinson decided to get married, they did not have any books to help them. They had no professional premarital counseling. And yet they and their generation developed far more stable families than we do today, with all our books, counseling and scientific knowledge. Why?

In the first place, they had a much better chance of marrying "our kind of folks." In Grandpa's day the range of selection for most young folks was about as far as Dobbin could travel and get back the same day - probably less than ten miles. Within this radius there were only about twenty available girls among whom Harry Allen could choose. Most of these were from his general background. The few who were not, he knew about.

Today a girl from Portland, Oregon meets a boy from Portland, Maine while both are on vacation at Biloxi, Mississippi. Because so many of us now live in big cities, and because of greater possibilities for travel, the number of available mates a young person might meet runs into the hundreds. Furthermore, many of these are not suitable, because of very different backgrounds. Yet superficially they look, behave, and generally act alike. The problem of choice was certainly a whole lot simpler in Grandpa's day.

Secondly, both Harry and Susie understood what marriage meant at that time, far better than most young people know what it means now. When Susie said "Yes" to Harry, she knew what she was getting into. What is more important, she had learned from her mother how to handle it. She could not only bake a pie, Billy Boy, but also tend a garden, raise chickens, make clothing, and manage a household. She and Grandpa would never have dreamed of discussing sex. But both of them had been brought up on farms where animals were bred. In some ways they knew more about it than their less inhibited grandchildren.

They also knew each other and each other's families well long before they were called upon to "know" each other in the Biblical sense. Both their families had lived in the same town since before they were born. There was little about any family which was not publicly understood. Harry knew what the whole town knew, that Susie's Aunt Jane had run off with a man not her husband, and was now living some¬where in New York with her twelve-year-old son, supported in part by Brother Jo, who was Susie's father.

Harry's Aunt May, who was "not too bright," lived in the same town with an unmarried brother, with no attempt to conceal either her mental limitations or her relatedness. Everybody knew that Harry's mother had "not been the same" since her youngest son died, and that Susie's father sometimes drank too much hard cider and was not too reliable. Yes, our grandparents knew, not only the persons whom they married, but often the characters and even the emotions of their in-laws.

Finally and perhaps most important, they demanded far less of their marriages. Life was hard, and often a rather grim business. The most important task was to secure basic physical necessities. Marriage might have its moments of romance and emotional glow, but its main function was to produce things, especially things to eat. Husbands and wives no more thought of demanding glamor of each other, than a farmer of today would demand it of his tractor. They might appreciate beauty in each other, as in their animals and their land, but the function of them all was primarily to produce.

The relative stability, plus the romantic portrayals of marriage in the past, have caused many to overestimate the desirability of the "old-fashioned home." Yet the absence of divorce is not the same as success. There is another side to the picture. As Thornton Wilder has so skillfully portrayed, the atmosphere of Our Town was constricted and arid; its people emotionally malnourished. The peculiarities and personality quirks so vividly and truly described by such novelists as Dickens and Mark Twain were amusing to our fathers. But these authors themselves sensed what we are just now beginning to realize, that humor is often the distorted mask of tragedy. If they wrote truly of their times, serious personality distortion was tragically common. Of course personality, good and bad, is a product of an entire culture, not of the family alone, but the family is a major influence. Our ancestors were less successful in their family life than many have supposed. But we must get back to the problems of the people of today.

Harry Allen's grandson faces a far more difficult problem of mate selection. Within a ten-mile radius of Harry's home lived about twenty available girls. The grandson lives in a big city, and within a ten-mile radius of his home are more than twenty thousand marriageable girls. Furthermore, because of modern transportation, the size of the radius can be expanded indefinitely. Harry knew which of the girls were "his kind of folks." His grandson finds it very difficult to know the background and the family of the girls he meets, and how they look at, think and feel about life. Yet such knowledge of those whom we are considering marrying is as important as it ever was.

Young people of today have another problem which adds to their difficulties of selection. They expect so much more from marriage. Susie demanded only that Harry be reasonably decent and a "good provider." Harry demanded little more than competence in the garden and in the kitchen. We of today demand much more. We expect that the person whom we marry will be able to make us happy. Living in big cities among thousands of people who never really know us, makes us hungry for intimate companionship. When we marry we demand of each other a kind of intimate feeling interaction which is far more difficult to get than anything expected by our grandparents. And to complicate matters, Hollywood glamor pictures give us absurd ideas of the romantic bliss which we feel that marriage should give.

Yes, marriage selection today is difficult and full of challenge. How can you know what you will want in a wife or husband years from now? How can you know what he or she will be like at the very time when your mate will be most important to you? Furthermore, even if you do know what you may want, how can you know that you are getting it?

All In One Marriage Prep

Christian Marriage Counseling

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Maturity for Marriage

April 10th, 2010 by admin

Those who are called into the armed forces, or take certain jobs in industry, do not always have to be skilled in the work which they will be called upon to do at the time of enlistment or beginning a job.

Many things we can learn on the job or by special training. People do have to be sufficiently developed and mature so that they can follow through with the training and the discipline which may be required.

So it is with marriage.

Getting married is not like starting out on a picnic. It means taking over a real job. You will not have all the skills which it requires to begin with, nobody does.  But you both should be sufficiently “grown-up” so that you can learn the skills as required, and discharge the responsibilities which the new relationship demands.

Over time you will be amazed how your abilities increase as you and your spouse grow and mature.

Christian Marriage Counseling

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Are you Qualified for Parenthood?

April 6th, 2010 by admin

Figure it this way. If you marry you may have a baby within a year, whether you now plan it that way or not. Are you ready to accept a baby if it should come, regardless of your present plans? Do you now have the discipline and maturity which caring for a baby requires? If not, you are not yet old enough to marry.

Here is what you are up against. However carefully you may plan to avoid children during the first years of your marriage, and however well-informed you may be on how to do it, slips do occur. A second possibility is that you may change your mind. Some couples find so much happiness and joy in their marriages that they scrap their plans and decide to have their children right away. You, also, may feel, “Everything is so wonderful. Why should we wait for our babies?”

Being old enough means, first of all, physical maturity. You are not likely to have any trouble here. A few couples marry knowing in advance that it will never be possible for them to have children. These are special cases to which our discussion does not apply. The bride for whom motherhood is a reasonable expectancy should be sufficiently developed physically to be able to bear children with reasonable safety.

Couples are more likely to be too young at the point of personality and emotional maturity. Taking care of a baby requires developed and disciplined responsibility. If you still want to play around all the time and would resent being tied down, you are not yet ready. It is certainly all right for the married couple to want to continue to enjoy dances, parties and other social festivities after marriage. The question is, “Could you give them up without undue strain, if you had to?”

Remember, taking care of a small baby is often an around-the-clock job. Even with the help of your mother and baby sitters, you will be tied down closely for some time. Your day of social fun may not be over, but it certainly will be different. Could you both take it if necessary?
How can you know? Certainly love of good times does not necessarily indicate a lack of discipline.

Madge Brown was always chasing around, apparently without a serious thought in her head. But after she married and had her baby she became not merely a devoted, but a highly satisfied mother. On the other hand, Priscilla seemed to be the quiet, responsible type. Yet she deserted both her husband and her ten-month-old baby.

In evaluating yourselves on this matter of discipline, ask yourselves such questions as the following:

Have we a good record for following through on our responsibilities? If either or both of you has a record of ducking responsibilities, letting other people do most of the work, pushing off jobs on others, better wait. If, on the other hand, you both see through anything you undertake, this is a favorable sign.

Can you both stand on your own feet? Those who must still be taken care of, whether economically, emotionally or physically, are not old enough for marriage. On the other hand, the girl who can organize and promote parties successfully may well be ready for the job of organizing and running a home with a baby in it.

Finally, not only can you, but do you want to assume the responsibilities of marriage and parenthood? Many young people who have come through well when the test came still wish that they had waited just a year or so longer, and enjoyed the freedom and lack of responsibilities of single life just a bit more, before stepping off into the different realm of marriage.

Successful parenthood requires sufficient emotional maturity so that your influence on your children will be good. We do not expect parents to be perfect. They should be grown-up enough so that they will not have to take their own negative feelings out on their children too much. How much is “too much,” and what being emotionally mature means, we shall discuss more fully in a later posts.

Christian Marriage Counseling

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How Important is Education in Marriage?

April 3rd, 2010 by admin

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Many of the smartest and ablest people have had little schooling, and some people with degrees are quite stupid about some aspects of life. Yet formal schooling does have important advantages, such as the following:

1.    Social standing. Family and money may be socially important. Yet the person with education has more standing than he would have without it, and up to a certain point, the greater his education the higher his social standing.

2.    Greater vocational opportunity and, generally, higher income. It is true that some milk drivers get more than most college professors, and that a coal miner who works regularly tops ninety percent of our teachers. Yet on the whole, more education means more income.  Many vocations, such as medicine, law, dentistry, and engineering are completely closed to the person without special training, and other vocations are rapidly adopting educational requirements. Whatever may have been the situation in the past, today the person without special training is at a decided vocational disadvantage.

3.    Basic understanding for effective living. Education can mean a better understanding of people and of the world we live in. In times past the politician, the taxi driver and the reporter may have understood life better than the psychologist and the sociologist. The business man often knew better what was coming than did the economist. This day is rapidly
passing. We are developing a considerable body of technical, scientific knowledge about institutions and people.

Those who are not so trained lack the basic understandings essential to effective living. Superior intelligence and alertness may, in part, compensate for lack of schooling. But do not let this fool you. The wisdom of the man who has only his own eyes and experiences is a limited wisdom which cannot function effectively in the kind of world which young people face today.

4. Success in marriage. The higher the educational level, the greater the chance for success in marriage. High school graduates divorce less frequently than do those of less schooling. College graduates stay married longer and more happily than others.

In education as in many other matters, it is better if both are about equal. Bill, who had never been beyond the eighth grade, and had few intellectual interests, passed up girls of his own educational level in favor of Mary. For Mary had been to college, and read “intellectual” books. After their marriage he introduced her proudly to his friends, just as he might have shown off a ball-glove once used by Babe Ruth, or a personal letter from Tom Hanks.

But before long, trouble began to develop. The wives of Bill’s friends felt inferior and ill-at-ease in Mary’s presence. She tried hard to be friendly and pleasant. But they always had the feeling that she was critical of their grammar and pronunciation, and began to feel that she was “stuck up.” Naturally, Mary felt thwarted and hurt. Since she had no one with whom to share her intellectual interests, she felt isolated and alone.

As time went on, she and Bill began to sense their lack of some important bases for companionship. He began to feel inferior about his own lacks, and tried to cover it up by being tough and sensitive. Whenever they were together, especially in company, she had to devote most of her attention to avoiding hurting his feelings. Neither dared to relax and be himself, which is no way to enjoy a marriage relationship. Bill would have been far better off with a girl more like himself, with whom he felt fully at ease, and who would have fitted in better with his crowd.

In this country almost anyone who wants education can get as much as he can handle. It is no disgrace if people do not want advanced schooling. Some young people ought not to go to college, yet may be quite as good as those who graduate. But they, like others, should usually marry within their own educational level without blaming their situation upon lack of opportunity.

Certainly you should not use a promise to get more education after you marry, to persuade another to accept you. If you had to choose between a wholesome personality and character on the one hand, and education on the other, by all means choose the first. But any essential personality and character qualities can usually be found in someone of your own general educational level.

Christian Marriage Counseling

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Are You Vocationally Prepared for Marriage?

April 3rd, 2010 by admin

In the eyes of most people, this question will apply mainly to the man. In our culture, the husband is expected to earn the living for himself, his wife, and their children. At one time it was believed that any man “worth his salt” could provide adequately for his family. Poverty in a family in which there was an able-bodied husband was regarded as the result of shiftlessness and laziness. We now know better.

Due to circumstances beyond the control of any individual, such as bad business conditions and recessions, able and competent men may be unable to secure employment. This possibility is a risk which anyone who marries must be willing to take. The couple should demand of the prospective husband only that he should be able to hold down a suitable job, if one is to be had.

Exceptions to this rule can safely be made, also, for those who are in training, including students, even though at the time of marriage they are not yet earning a living.  The idea of what constitutes a suitable living will vary with the individual. Florence was brought up in a fairly well-to-do family. She has been used to having almost anything she wanted without question. Her boy friend, Jeffrey, is a fine man but without especial abilities or ambitions.

He will make a good, steady husband, and will earn enough to supply a family modestly. He will never be able to earn the kind of money which Florence will demand. Her father could give Jeffrey a well-paying position in the firm. But he could not do the work satisfactorily. He would either have to live on a kind of charity, or face frustration and defeat.

They were both wise in seeing the situation, and calling the whole thing off. Tom, another friend, could earn what Florence requires. But he wants to become a college professor, and would not be happy doing anything else. So neither of them will let things go too far. They may be genuinely fond of each other, even to the point of love, but they both understand that marriage to each other is not in the picture.

There is yet another aspect of her vocational situation. In an increasing number of households wives work outside the home to help with the family income. Problems connected with this situation will be discussed more fully in future posts. Furthermore, the young mother should be able, in case of the death of her husband, to earn a living for both herself and her children. In most cases the amount of insurance will not be more than enough to keep the family going until she can adjust herself and find suitable employment. Every young person, male or female, married or single, should be able to earn a living.

Christian Marriage Counseling

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Are you both sufficiently disciplined with reference to money and property?

April 2nd, 2010 by admin

Peggy was attractive and amazingly skilled in developing convincing “hard luck” stories. In consequence she was able to “mooch” quantities of clothes and considerable money from kind friends. Yet she was always destitute. If she had money, she was without sales resistance and bought anything which attracted her. Hence she was always “broke.”

She never could be kept in clothing. Whenever she got anything new she wore it at once, even to work in the garden, or walk in the rain. When it became soiled or torn a bit, instead of cleaning or repairing it, she would throw it out. Then she would either dress in the rags which she had left, or “mooch” something more.

In the matter of money and property, Peggy was still a little girl and despite her twenty-five years, unready for the responsibilities of adult life in marriage. In this same category we should include also the “easy-come, easy-go” group; people who earn plenty of money but never have any.

Gamblers and “dead beats” and others always looking for ways to pick up easy money which does not have to be earned, and “escape artists” who are always just about to do something big which they never accomplish, likewise illustrate an immature irresponsibility which shows lack of readiness for marriage.

It is not always fair to blame such people, any more than we would blame a ten-year-old boy for being unable to do a man’s work. But whether or not irresponsible people are to blame, they certainly are not ready for marriage.

At this point we wish only to summarize the essentials for marriage. Before you marry you should make sure that:

1. You can keep your own clothing and other things neat, clean, and in good repair.
2. You are a good credit risk. Buy only what you can afford, and accept full responsibility for your debts and other financial obligations.
3. Under ordinary circumstances, you can live within your income, no matter how small it may be.

Christian Marriage Counseling

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Can you pull your own weight in marriage?

April 1st, 2010 by admin

The question of marriage with those who have physical disabilities presents a special problem with which we shall not be concerned here. Furthermore, those who may require some physical help may otherwise be unusually self-reliant and far less helpless in the total marriage relationship than some of the able-bodied. 

We recognize, too, that girls who are actually competent and able sometimes play the “helpless” role because they feel that it will make them more appealing to men. Our concern here is with the competence of those without physical disabilities.

As we have indicated, marriage is not a prolonged party, but a serious job involving real responsibilities. Being ready for marriage means, first of all, that you can take care of yourself. For various reasons, people may reach adulthood still unable to take care of themselves.

Others, wishing to be “big, strong men,” or wanting to give some man just the “mothering he needs” find such helplessness appealing, especially if the helpless are “cute” or make them feel important. Such marriages are dangerous, not only because people usually get tired of carrying others on their backs, but also because we lose respect for the able-bodied helpless.

By helplessness we do not mean the absence of any particular abilities and skills. The bride may face a stalled car in hopeless resignation, and the groom may have not the slightest idea what to do with an uncooked steak. Few of us have at the time of marriage all the skills and abilities which would be desirable.

Here we mean a general attitude of lying down before most situations and expecting others to assume full responsibility for almost everything. We do not blame people for such a lack. They may be deficient through no fault of their own. Neither do we imply that they are incurable.

They may be incompetent because they have always had servants or indulgent parents to do
everything for them. In time they might learn to stand on their own feet. We do say that as long as they are not able to take care of themselves adequately they are not ready for marriage.

Success in marriage requires not only the ability, but a willingness to do a fair share of the work. Dolly and Harold were practically engaged until they were together for several days at a house party in which the work was divided up among the group. Harold proved to be a past master at being somewhere else when there was work to be done, or getting someone else to do his work, or appearing to be very busy while doing nothing.

She had no desire to be a squaw for the rest of her life, doing all the work while her lord lolled in idleness. So marriage with Harold was “out,” and Dolly was grateful for the experience which had given her ample warning. Any person who habitually leaves most of the work to others is not mature enough for marriage. A person ready for marriage enjoys responsibility, and willingly accepts his share of the load.

Christian Marriage Counseling

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Difference in Age Considerations for Marriage

March 31st, 2010 by admin

If the man is about the same age as, or somewhat older than the girl, there will be no especial problem of age suitability.  If the girl is slightly older there will be no especial problem unless one or the other feels sensitive about it. The only question then will be, “How do they feel about it?”

As people grow older, age differences become less important. Other things being equal, there will be less difference between a woman of fifty and a man of seventy, than between a girl of twenty and a man of forty.

When one is relatively young and the other as much as twelve years older, the couple should carefully review the following problems:

There may be real differences in their interest in physical activities. If the man is the elder, this may not be too important.

A greater problem will be the stage in which their interests happen to be. Younger people often want to spend time at dances, parties, night clubs, and similar activities. When people become older such activities are far less attractive and may, if indulged in too much, become boring. If the husband is considerably older and he and his wife do what he wants, she may miss out on a phase of her experience which, rightly or wrongly, she may always regret.

If they do what she enjoys most, he is being dragged through the same experiences twice, perhaps after he is eager to go on to something else. A compromise may work out. On the other hand, it may result in a type of social life which is satisfactory to neither of them.

A deeper phase of the same problem concerns one’s attitude toward life. To those of less experience the problems of life seem much simpler than they actually are. Young people are quite likely to feel that the older generation must be fools, or they would long since have abolished war, poverty, industrial strife and mosquitoes.

Older people, on the other hand, often find the enthusiasms of youth amusing. They may tolerate them in their children, but do not want them in a spouse. If the age difference is so great that the wife regards her husband as an old fogy, and the husband thinks of his wife as a simple child who spends too much effort and time in things that do not matter, the situation is not favorable to a successful marriage.

Yet the fact that a marriage is risky does not necessarily mean that it should not be attempted. Since in most parts of the country a desirable man can usually find a girl who is about his own age to marry him, he rarely need risk the greater chance. But the girl is often less favorably situated. In many instances, if she does not take an older man, she may feel that she will not be able to find one who is suitable at all.

Furthermore, other considerations may make the older man far preferable to someone who is younger. One young lady of twenty-five who was marrying a man twice her age strongly stated that she would rather marry a first-class man of fifty than a third-rate man of thirty. There could be other advantages to such a union. The girl who marries an older man has a better chance of knowing what she is getting.

In any case, the most important consideration is not age, but maturity. Younger people who are more mature than most of their contemporaries may actually find an older mate to be more congenial. Yet a preference for a much older mate should be scrutinized with great care. The danger is that the older person is psychologically a substitute parent, rather than a mate.

Christian Marriage Counseling

 

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