Originally Posted by
usirchchris
http:///forum/post/3125993
Perhaps I am an idiot for suggesting he pace himself, however, with your first wife if you had gone with my 5 year plan...I am guessing you saw signs of your lives pulling apart before that 6th year. Hopefully it was an amicable split and she did not take half your stuff, the house, and the dog, or vice versa for her. Many are not so lucky. If it is meant to be, it is meant to be, and a few years of learning will make no difference. IMO. But caution to the wind for you and anyone else if you will...Makes no difference to me
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She got the dog and cat, I got to keep my 401K.
We dated for over two years before we got married, one of those years was just living together. Five years isn't logical in today's society unless you're some kid straight out of high school or college. Personally, I don't think anyone should contemplate marriage until they are at least in their late 20's and early 30's. Any sooner than that, and you end up with a partner that didn't get to truly enjoy their '20's wild life and living pahse'. That was the problem with my first wife. She was only 24, and when we did start talking about marriage, her Dad said you have two choices - 1) I pay for an extravagent wedding, or 2) I pay for your law school. She chose the wedding. Six years later she decided she made a mistake by taking the wedding. Mainly because two of her closest friends finished law school, and she got the 'itch'. After she got a 42 on the LSAT, then accepted to both UT Law and Harvard, she was hooked. There was no 'pulling apart' involved. We had a very comfortable life, no kids, traveled around the world, and had no financial worries. It was nothing more than a career decision. I would've had to leave a company I helped build from the ground to move to a town that I couldn't possibly start over again. She could've gone to a local law school, but she didn't want to compromise. It was her way or the highway. She chose the highway...