i know that this is true love because when i first met him i was so NOT attracted to him.
Yumie wrote:Congratulations, A4J! I'm not going to say that it couldn't work because I have known several people to get engaged at your age or younger (two of my cousins were eighteen when they were engaged, and I have one friend who was only seventeen) and all are several years happily married, both of my cousins with two children.
silver_wolf454 wrote:Hey, my parents got married at 17 and had me at 18 and their marrige is just fine. ^^
Tyrel (post: 1189507) wrote:Hmm.. Everyone seems to be saying that it seems early for most 18 year olds. I think this is partially true, but more and more it's outdated advice. I'm 21 and I've already been a groomsmen at one wedding, and attended at least one other in the past year off the top of my head. All marriages and proposals being people under 25. I find the maturity level of this generation to be quite surprising. Generally, I would say that 18 is too young, but I don't know of any 18 year olds who pretend to commit. That's an outdated fashion.. I guess I'm calling the rest of the board old fashioned {or worse, old timers }, but I have to say, if he proposed, and you are working at it together, with you pastor involved and everything, I don't see any problem whatsoever.
If you and him have the maturity needed for now, then just continue down the path you're headed. I might suggest you take the whole marriage thing really really slow, and be reverent about it, but people have their own Pace.
The reason I say this is that often people, I find, tend to look down upon newly married couples of 20 years old. One of the most successful couples I know {now old} met and were married in something like 6 weeks, when they were very young. Still happy together. Why? Because they were mature enough to recognize what they wanted, and go about it correctly. "That's not a typical case", most respond. Sure, but I would respond to that "Any marriage proposal before the age of 25 isn't a common case in our generation". I think we need to recognize people who decide to get married around 20, as proper and mature couples, capable and willing to commit. To look upon them with a prejudice isn't always for the worst, but I think that the Ideas we have about younger people are becoming less and less accurate to the young people of today.
I'm just throwing it out there that I think we should be less quick these days to say these things to younger people, that's all.
Azier the Swordsman (post: 1189954) wrote:I would recommend at the very least taking a few marriage counseling sessions with your pastor beforehand. When my dad was pastoring, it was a requirement before he would marry a couple and for good reason. Even if you haven't considered it, it could be extremely beneficial to you later on down the road, especially as a couple who have only known each other for such a short amount of time and are already going down the path of marriage.
Much luck to you both.
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