Don’t Get Married If….
This is a great piece, a must read, a fresh reasonable outlook … We like to know what you think about this…
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If you’re not ready to delay gratification when your are angry. To hold
your tongue, lower your voice and sometimes wait till the appropriate
time, or even day before you can deal with an issue thoroughly…. don’t
get married. Immaturity is the inability to delay gratification. Marriage is for the mature.
If you’re not ready to leave center stage and allow someone else to
become your focus, your study, your muses… don’t get married. Selfish
people make very bad spouses. In marriage you don’t lose yourself but
your heart has to be big enough to gain someone else. And soon, with
God’s blessing: little, crying, diaper soiling, demanding little ones
are coming!
Don't get married if...
If you are not ready,
to stand up and calmly deal with meddling in laws as a united front: The
opinionated sister, the insensitive uncle, the domineering father, the
manner less brother, the nosy aunt….. don’t get married. Boundaries do
not exist automatically, they must be created. A good spouse is
committed to respectfully stand up for and protect their marriage from
meddling relatives. Don’t abandon your spouse to your relatives. It’s
betrayal.
If you are not ready to pay bills…. don’t get
married. Love does not pay bills. Kenya power will not give a waiver
because your love is O so strong and your gazes at each other, O so
romantic.
If you are not ready to let go of your opposite sex
“best friends” and invest that into your spouse. To like, to laugh, to
play, to be silly and to enjoy life with them, above anyone else… don’t
get married. Affairs happen because people did not marry their best
friends. Someone else holds their heart. Someone else gets them better.
Someone else inspires them more. Marry your best friend and cultivate
your friendship so that you remain best friends.
If you are not
ready to stop competing with the Joneses…. don’t get married. Let the
Joneses buy their yacht when you are still walking, and enjoy the walk.
Your journeys are different. They may have to cross the oceans but you
may be going through the road route. A boat might not do you any good on
your journey. You must be ready to pace yourselves: stop competing,
stop spending your future before you get there, stop the debt, stop
trying to impress people. You must be able to be content. To enjoy your
journey without deciding your happiness simply by measuring your
progress against other people.
If you are not ready to be an
open book. To tell the whole story of your past, deal with the memories,
expose the failures and risk rejection…. don’t get married. It is fraud
to have someone sign off their life to you without the full details.
The past is a touchy and demanding friend. It always shows up in the
marriage. It doesn’t enjoy being ignored and the more you snob, the
bolder it becomes and the more tantrums it throws. It will mess up the
“neat” and “all together lovely” image that you are struggling to
maintain.
If you are not ready to let go of your philandering
and wild oats farming…. don’t get married. Don’t take somebody’s son or
daughter and subject them to your germs, your indiscretions and your
chips fungaz. It never ends well. It’s romanticized in the movies, it’s
being fronted as the only “realistic” way to stay married and keep the
fire burning. But truth be told, the only thing that the fire will burn
will be you, your spouse and your children. That family will burn for
generations in bitterness, disease, fear, failure, hatred, broken
hearts, broken dreams and conniving.
Finally, if you are not
ready to let go of the adrenalin rush of a risque life and to settle
down…. don’t get married. The great Columbus [who we were told
"discovered" America, Have you ever wondered if the Native Indians who
were in it, knew that it existed
had a diary that was long sought for. People wanted to read about the
wild journeys, the sea tempest, the reckless pirates they fought, the
death and the danger they must have encountered. When it was found,
there was great disappointment. Majority of the pages simply had 5
words: “This day, we sailed on.”.
Marriage, like life in
general, has many “we sail on” days. You have to learn to find the
thrill in the normal everydayness of it. If you depend on wild romance,
all night sex [ha], romantic cruises, wild parties, compulsive moves
across continents, tempestuous fights and make up sessions to be happy,
you may be disappointed. You have to learn to thrill in gentle smiles,
loving hugs, knowing looks, cozy moments, shared chores, cute babies,
everyday work, dreaming together, praying together and simply living
together. If these things are not thrilling, exciting and satisfying,
you will look for a way out. The “boom twaff” moments are still there,
but they are normally punctuations to the usualness of living. They
cannot be your reason for getting married. They are unsustainable on an
everyday basis. The one you choose must be thrilling to you even in the
most mundane of moments.
I pray this helps someone. Remember
singles, YOU HAVE THE PRIVILEGE OF CHOICE. Never let anyone pressure you
into marriage. You are either ready or you’re not: You decide!. But
please don’t marry somebody and then punish them to live with your
childish ways for the rest of their lives . A childish baby is cute but a childish adult is extremely frustrating.
Marriage is for the mature and in many ways, we the married, are still
being confronted with the demand to grow up day by day. If you are not
ready for that demand, don’t get married!!!!
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