Brian63
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2001
- Messages
- 1,639
- Location
- Michigan
- Gender
- Male
- Basic Beliefs
- Freethinker/atheist/humanist
When a pair (or more) of people are dating and decide to commit exclusively to each other, what more specifically does that imply, and what would it entail? The same is especially true when they would take the extra step and decide to marry each other.
I have always been uncomfortable with the idea of entering into a committed relationship. What would be the advantage of making an exclusive dating commitment to any woman that I was dating at a certain time? In effect, it would be saying “Okay, I promise to commit to being in this relationship with only you. Even if another woman was to cross paths with me who was available and mutually interested and would be a better match for me than you are, I will still stick with you anyway just because we happened to meet first. Just a matter of unfortunate timing.” From a romantic angle, why should a person commit to dating a particular person, when later in life you may enter someone else who is better for you? Couples break up for a multitude of reasons anyway, and it seems that making a vow to commit to someone does not guarantee that you will actually remain committed to them, it instead means that you are making it harder for yourself to un-commit even if you wanted to. When you vow to marry someone, that does not guarantee that you will remain married (since couples can divorce), it just makes it more difficult for you to break up, even if you wanted to.
The exact opposite direction was always more appealing for me, even as a late entrant into the dating world. If I was in a romantic relationship with a woman, I would always want to make it as easy as humanly possible for either of us to exit that relationship, if either wanted to. There would be no (or as little as possible) financial or legal complications involved. There would be little emotional or psychological distress. She would not be staying with me because she had entrenched so much of her past with me, and overhauling our lives is difficult to do. If she always had a (relatively) easy path to leave me if she desired that, and then I saw with my own eyes that she actually remained with me, then I could be more confident that she had a genuine desire to be with me. She valued me as a friend and a romantic partner. I likewise would always want to make it as easy as possible to leave a relationship with a woman, if I so desired. If I stayed, it was not because I actually desired to leave but just found that path too bothersome. Instead I stayed because I wanted to be with her.
Especially---why should any 2 people decide to become legally married to each other? There are legal and financial benefits to being married, but when a person chooses to become married they are not marrying the institution of marriage or an abstract idea of it. They are marrying another specific human being. Why choose to marry John, when 20 years from now you may get tired of that relationship and want to become romantic with Larry instead, or just be single for awhile?
It seems significantly that people have an appeal to being in a generic relationship, and so will prematurely enter into one, and then be too hesitant to leave it, even if they would benefit from doing so. When people get married, they will be “marrying marriage” because they want that lifestyle, even if the specific human being they decide to marry is not really a good fit for them. Too bad though, you made that choice 20 years ago in what began with a glamorous ceremony, and so you are now stuck with it, even if you regret it and want out.
Similarly, I do not like seeing when couples announce that they have been married for [X] number of years, and then other people respond with congratulations on that achievement. Everyone has good and charitable intentions, and I am not denigrating their intentions. It is only that we are celebrating the length of time that a couple remained together, even if it was a miserable marriage that both of them would have benefitted from ending earlier. It would be more important for a person to have a brief 6-month emotionally uplifting relationship (even if it ended amicably) than a 30-year marriage where they just became tolerant of being around each other, but may have even disliked each other. Quality should matter over quantity.
To me it has always seemed like a mistake in judgment for any people to commit to being in a relationship with each other, and especially to marry each other (which introduces other factors, and your romantic feelings for your partner now become legally binding on you).
Agreeing and disagreeing comments are welcome. Thank you.
I have always been uncomfortable with the idea of entering into a committed relationship. What would be the advantage of making an exclusive dating commitment to any woman that I was dating at a certain time? In effect, it would be saying “Okay, I promise to commit to being in this relationship with only you. Even if another woman was to cross paths with me who was available and mutually interested and would be a better match for me than you are, I will still stick with you anyway just because we happened to meet first. Just a matter of unfortunate timing.” From a romantic angle, why should a person commit to dating a particular person, when later in life you may enter someone else who is better for you? Couples break up for a multitude of reasons anyway, and it seems that making a vow to commit to someone does not guarantee that you will actually remain committed to them, it instead means that you are making it harder for yourself to un-commit even if you wanted to. When you vow to marry someone, that does not guarantee that you will remain married (since couples can divorce), it just makes it more difficult for you to break up, even if you wanted to.
The exact opposite direction was always more appealing for me, even as a late entrant into the dating world. If I was in a romantic relationship with a woman, I would always want to make it as easy as humanly possible for either of us to exit that relationship, if either wanted to. There would be no (or as little as possible) financial or legal complications involved. There would be little emotional or psychological distress. She would not be staying with me because she had entrenched so much of her past with me, and overhauling our lives is difficult to do. If she always had a (relatively) easy path to leave me if she desired that, and then I saw with my own eyes that she actually remained with me, then I could be more confident that she had a genuine desire to be with me. She valued me as a friend and a romantic partner. I likewise would always want to make it as easy as possible to leave a relationship with a woman, if I so desired. If I stayed, it was not because I actually desired to leave but just found that path too bothersome. Instead I stayed because I wanted to be with her.
Especially---why should any 2 people decide to become legally married to each other? There are legal and financial benefits to being married, but when a person chooses to become married they are not marrying the institution of marriage or an abstract idea of it. They are marrying another specific human being. Why choose to marry John, when 20 years from now you may get tired of that relationship and want to become romantic with Larry instead, or just be single for awhile?
It seems significantly that people have an appeal to being in a generic relationship, and so will prematurely enter into one, and then be too hesitant to leave it, even if they would benefit from doing so. When people get married, they will be “marrying marriage” because they want that lifestyle, even if the specific human being they decide to marry is not really a good fit for them. Too bad though, you made that choice 20 years ago in what began with a glamorous ceremony, and so you are now stuck with it, even if you regret it and want out.
Similarly, I do not like seeing when couples announce that they have been married for [X] number of years, and then other people respond with congratulations on that achievement. Everyone has good and charitable intentions, and I am not denigrating their intentions. It is only that we are celebrating the length of time that a couple remained together, even if it was a miserable marriage that both of them would have benefitted from ending earlier. It would be more important for a person to have a brief 6-month emotionally uplifting relationship (even if it ended amicably) than a 30-year marriage where they just became tolerant of being around each other, but may have even disliked each other. Quality should matter over quantity.
To me it has always seemed like a mistake in judgment for any people to commit to being in a relationship with each other, and especially to marry each other (which introduces other factors, and your romantic feelings for your partner now become legally binding on you).
Agreeing and disagreeing comments are welcome. Thank you.