Thursday, November 17, 2011

Get to Know Your Loved One


To avoid fallacies, the institution of marriage should not take place because of economic necessities by women, but as a co-existing partnership. Prior to marriages, each individual should take a step back and learn about one’s partner. Many couples go blind into marriage and find that they disagree on many subjects. Family therapists suggest that engaged couples take multiple pre-marital counseling sessions in order to learn how each other want to live their lives. In these sessions, deep conversations take place in which couples learn the ups and downs to their relationship, including the well-known trait of jealousy. Frank Furstenberg Jr., sociology professor at University of Pennsylvania who has been studying divorce for 20 years and co- author of Divided Families, suggests that couples identify a “marriage contract,” in which they negotiate exactly what they want for themselves and their children throughout their lifetime.
Finances, communications, and family planning should be discussed in pre-marital counseling within the Catholic Church to prevent “bad” marriages, according to Michael McManus, the author of Marriage Savers and national leader of adopting pre-marital procedures. I agree that Furstenberg has a point in emphasizing the responsibilities and roles each individual must take in the relationship since it will help solve future issues. Communication is the key to success in any matter and in marriages it is a necessity. I acknowledge that there should be procedures and measures taken before marriage, but society needs to comprehend that marriage isn’t solely about love and the commitment of two individuals for the sake of a family, but it’s a partnership in which the couple knows the in and outs of their partner.

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