Hey Everyone,
One of the biggest reasons people seem to say they want to get married is because they don't want to be lonely anymore.
As I get older, I find this to be ironic because when I talk to people I know who are part of a couple, it seems as if they very rarely get to see one another. Most work shifts that are either directly opposite of their partner/spouse, or allow for very little time together.
For example, most couples I know have children, and so both parents' working schedules must be worked around the kids. Many seem to have a situation in which one parent works in the morning, and the other works at night so that one parent is always with the kids. But this also means that one parent is always leaving as the other one is coming home, and very few of these couples seem to have days off or vacations together.
When thinking about the thread in which women discussed what it means for a man to be a provider, I have to wonder if it's realistic to expect that a provider would actually be able to spend any time with his family. (I was also thinking about people who say their father provided for them when they were growing up, but was never actually there for them, whether physically or emotionally.)
I've only known a few families in which the man was the sole provider (but the women worked before kids and then again when the kids were older), and they all seemed to have one thing in common -- the man did indeed provide, but he worked hours that to some, might not be humanly possible.
When I was a kid, I remember my Mom asking my Dad what time he needed to get up in the morning, and it was often at 3 AM, because he had to be to work by 4 AM, and wouldn't get home until 6 in the evening -- 6 days a week. On Sundays, my Dad was fortunate to have the flexibility to go to church with us, but then it was back to work for the rest of the afternoon.
The men I know who are providers for their households work around 60 to 100+ hours a week, especially during holidays. As one stated, rather wistfully, "40 hours a week is just a part-time job."
And I'm sure that the wives (or whoever is taking care of the kids) very often feels as if they are a single parent who is doing everything alone.
I'm not sure that I know any couples who are in a position where they work similar hours (so they can spend the rest of the day or night together), get the same days off, and have vacations off together so that "they will never be lonely." Most couples I know work in fields with ever-changing demands, and if you want to keep your job, you have to take what's offered, even if it means barely seeing your spouse.
But, that's just my own perspective.
* What have you observed? Did your own parents get to spend much time together?
* Do you think you'll get to spend a lot of time with your future spouse? Why or why not?
* How would you feel about always taking care of the kids and never seeing your spouse, or working all the time and never seeing your spouse?
* How do you think you'd cope if you felt lonely within your own marriage? For instance, would you take a job so that your spouse didn't have to work as much?
I would really like to know what everyone else has seen among their own families/social circles and what they would do in that situation.
And of course, the experts in the crowd (our married regulars) are invited to be the thread's special guests of honor, because who would know better how to navigate these kinds of challenges than whose who may have faced it?
One of the biggest reasons people seem to say they want to get married is because they don't want to be lonely anymore.
As I get older, I find this to be ironic because when I talk to people I know who are part of a couple, it seems as if they very rarely get to see one another. Most work shifts that are either directly opposite of their partner/spouse, or allow for very little time together.
For example, most couples I know have children, and so both parents' working schedules must be worked around the kids. Many seem to have a situation in which one parent works in the morning, and the other works at night so that one parent is always with the kids. But this also means that one parent is always leaving as the other one is coming home, and very few of these couples seem to have days off or vacations together.
When thinking about the thread in which women discussed what it means for a man to be a provider, I have to wonder if it's realistic to expect that a provider would actually be able to spend any time with his family. (I was also thinking about people who say their father provided for them when they were growing up, but was never actually there for them, whether physically or emotionally.)
I've only known a few families in which the man was the sole provider (but the women worked before kids and then again when the kids were older), and they all seemed to have one thing in common -- the man did indeed provide, but he worked hours that to some, might not be humanly possible.
When I was a kid, I remember my Mom asking my Dad what time he needed to get up in the morning, and it was often at 3 AM, because he had to be to work by 4 AM, and wouldn't get home until 6 in the evening -- 6 days a week. On Sundays, my Dad was fortunate to have the flexibility to go to church with us, but then it was back to work for the rest of the afternoon.
The men I know who are providers for their households work around 60 to 100+ hours a week, especially during holidays. As one stated, rather wistfully, "40 hours a week is just a part-time job."
And I'm sure that the wives (or whoever is taking care of the kids) very often feels as if they are a single parent who is doing everything alone.
I'm not sure that I know any couples who are in a position where they work similar hours (so they can spend the rest of the day or night together), get the same days off, and have vacations off together so that "they will never be lonely." Most couples I know work in fields with ever-changing demands, and if you want to keep your job, you have to take what's offered, even if it means barely seeing your spouse.
But, that's just my own perspective.
* What have you observed? Did your own parents get to spend much time together?
* Do you think you'll get to spend a lot of time with your future spouse? Why or why not?
* How would you feel about always taking care of the kids and never seeing your spouse, or working all the time and never seeing your spouse?
* How do you think you'd cope if you felt lonely within your own marriage? For instance, would you take a job so that your spouse didn't have to work as much?
I would really like to know what everyone else has seen among their own families/social circles and what they would do in that situation.
And of course, the experts in the crowd (our married regulars) are invited to be the thread's special guests of honor, because who would know better how to navigate these kinds of challenges than whose who may have faced it?
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