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Ready to wed
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I hope this board will not fill up with angry posts about how awful Mormons are because we don't have premarital counseling. We do have LDS family services, which is usually a great option, but you only go there after a problem has arisen.
In addition to the kind of training/counseling described in this article, time together as a couple prior to marriage experiencing and addressing some of the difficult moments is also very important. It is nice to see an increase in pre-marital training. But is there an encouragement to also SLOW DOWN and experience those difficult moments and conversations that inevitably come over time?
Most all couples mesh well during the good times. And the traditional short courtships too often only involve good times. It is not until marriage that many couples even confront their first difficult moment, decision or conversation. Training and counseling is often adequate to help spouses through those. But at times couples are so incompatible at the very core personality that they are just unable to weather the difficult times. Only time together as a dating couple will allow couples to walk through those moments.
Reality is that so many young people (myself included at that time) believe that the sole purpose of Marriage is a License to have Sex. That that is first and foremost and everthing else will work itself out later. That anything that gets in the way of that is just people trying to "stop us from doing it."
You must get through that to get to this kind of thing which is much more proper and mature. That takes time and being mature. It is hard to be totally mature with screaming sometimes repressed hormones.
BYU and Institute have Marriage/Family Prep courses.
Reality can bite you in the butt, as it did with me. It wasn't until after the wedding that I saw the multitude of Credit Card statements come rolling in to my new spouses mailbox. I was shocked to hear what condition his credit was in, and how much consumer debt he had.
Engaged couples REALLY need to get to know each other besides "What are your favorite hobbies...movie...place to go out to eat...etc."
Finances lead to a majority of divorces. People need to make sure they are totally aware of each others financial tendencies before tying the knot.
I told my sister, she should take responsiblity for her own stupidity and not expect her new husband to suffer for it.
I never did ask if he knew about the debts before the marriage. But I can imagine that if I married someone, after saving what I did, having the financial goals that I did, to buy a house and have an emergency fund and go on vacations and the like,
I wouldn't look kindly at all if my new bride told me she wanted me to pay $35k for her debts. That wouldn't be fair to me.
They ended up getting divorced.
And I have to agree that financial management skills should be sought and talked over. Money issues are huge and have all sorts of emotional connotations that couples don't expect.
Several of my sons have paid off serious student debt for their wives, while enabling them to stay home with children. But it's added difficulties to the couples' financial lives that could have been prevented.
Our family highly recommends Dave Ramsay's books on finances--they've enabled several of us to make serious financial strides, whether our incomes are larger or smaller. You can buy them online. And he is a believer in tithing, too.
To say that they must only have the "spirit" and they will do fine is naive. Pre-marital counseling should be a must for all marriages; spirit or not.
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