Is it possible to marry your college sweetheart
In the Gilmore Girls follow-up episode several years later, we meet Rory and Logan once again. Their story captures perfectly what happens these days in the real world when women choose not to marry their college sweetheart solely because they want to put their careers first. Some 10 years later, she meets up with Logan, and they start a relationship once again — despite the fact that he's living with another woman — and spoiler aler Rory winds up pregnant. Um, now what? And that was the end of Gilmore Girls.
A bit extreme perhaps, but not really. We have in America an epidemic of women who were, like Rory, groomed to prioritize career over love and family and wind up in one of three predicaments:. They get bored trying to find themselves or realize their clock is ticking, at which point they decide to hurry up and get married. They marry a perfectly good man but suffer a huge emotional and financial toll trying to conceive even one child, let alone two. The reason women in the past felt they had to choose between marriage and career was because getting married often meant having a gaggle of kids whether a woman wanted them or not.
It would change the entire course of their future. But that's no longer the case. She can wait a few years to have children if she wants — I have a friend who married at 22 and waited nine years! But neither one is an option if you don't find your person first. No one ever adds that last part — at all costs — but it's almost always what happens.
The only caveat I will offer to happy college couples is to give your relationship a go in the real world for a few years before making a decision about marriage. When two persons are good friends and then become sweethearts, they have a deep understanding of every dream of their partner and shares a strong bond. Such cute and pure bonds are made during college days, as that time everybody is in just learning phase and hence no scope for manipulation and all.
The post was very engaging. Thanks for sharing this lovely post. On the flip side of things and only my own personal experience, my first wife and I were childhood sweethearts. Did you see the inference there that we ended up in divorce? I know quite a few childhood sweethearts that remain together. Please do keep me informed too!
Previous Next. Marriage is a big deal. Michelle Sohl July 26, at am - Reply. Felicia September 4, at pm - Reply. Aayna August 16, at pm - Reply.
TheGeek September 5, at pm - Reply. Thank you so much for your opinion though. Many couples find each other in college, and those relationships do end in marriage, often upon graduation, if not before.
They become a part of romantic college love stories — boy meets girl, boy and girl share college life together, boy and girl have cute love stories to hold on to, and then boy and girl get married. But these marriages are part of the statistics too, and can end in divorce.
While this may not seem a wonderfully romantic topic, there are reasons not to marry your college love. Here are five that should be considered.
There is something idyllic and romantic about college life in general. Kids are on their own and have freedom that they never had before. Finding a new relationship in this environment is far removed from relationships in the real world of adulthood.
There is an idealism that is not tempered by reality. You meet; you study together; you eat together; you sleep together; and you find ways to get those writing assignments completed, working together. When reality of adulthood actually hits, couples can find that they do not deal with it in the same way. College is, in many ways, a great equalizer. But once out of school, couples who have very different backgrounds, values, and priorities may not make it.
You are such a cute couple. Everyone assumes you will ultimately get married.
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