Yameretzu wrote:
I believe in love because I am in love. I have already talked about marriage and plan to but not for a fair few years. I have fights now and it hasn't ruined the relationship.
I believe in love very strongly, but I haven't been in love the way that I think it should really be. I'm very idealistic and I think there should be a deep sense of understanding between two people and a willingness and accept, respect, and cherish your partner just as they are even if you really dislike some things about them or disagree on stuff that is important to you. People say that when you are in love that you overlook the other person's flaws and imagine them as being perfect. I think that is bull***. When you truly love someone you see their flaws very clearly and accept that these are they very things that make them unique and wonderful. And of course this opens up the possiblity that they can treat you with the same respect and acceptance that you offer them. But I have yet to live this kind of relationship in the real world.
Yameretzu wrote:
The problem with marriage is, in my opinion, that when people are married they tend to make less effort because they feel more secure than if it was just boyfriend/girlfriend, this makes the other partner think they're lesss interested and therefore they feel upset.
I was going to say that the problem with marriage is that people grow and change over time, and the previously mentioned expectation that people are supposed to be perfect (hence the tendency to imagine them as being perfect and then get upset when reality rears its ugly head) does not allow room for the sorts of changes that are inevitable and necessary for personal growth. But I think your point is also a very good one.
By the way, I am saying this as someone who has been married for just over 20 years now and is feeling the pinch of personal growth where the relationship didn't really leave much room for that sort of thing. So the other problem with marriage is that many people (e.g. me) get married at a time in their lives when they really know very little about themselves or what they want or need to be happy in life. When you figure these things out much later you find yourself in a situation where the changes you would like to make in your life have become very complicated and difficult to actually carry out. The real catch here is that a lot of the changes in myself that have strained my marriage nearly to the breaking point have come about by watching my kids grow up and realizing that they are so much like me, only happier.
If I were starting over at this point, I don't think I would choose to get married again. I feel like our society really over hypes the value of keeping a relationship together long-term, when the real emphasis should be on individuals learning to be happy. If two people can each be happy by spending their entire adult lives together, then more power to them. But I don't think that is usually the case, and I disagree with the cultural assumption that staying together is automatically good, and moving on when you're really unhappy indicates some sort of character flaw.