LoveShack.org Community Forums

Reload this Page LoveShack.org Community Forums > Transitioning > Getting Married

I guess he's not askin any time soon!


Getting Married Cold feet to pre-marital stressors--the place to discuss all the issues that come with saying "I do."

Old 26th October 2009, 10:25 AM   #1
katiekayla1
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 11
I guess he's not askin any time soon!

Sigh......I've been patient. I have accomplished what he asked of me financially. Got the job(actually working 6 days a wk!) contributing to the household,cooking more blah blah blah. Yes, I am a princess, but really?? No RING after 2yrs. of having it in a safe?? Come on now! We live together and he tells me all the time how he adores me,we're perfect for each other etc. and I truly believe he's sincere. He does, however, have some insecurity issues from ex-wifey but no reason not to trust me. We're great together,no major issues,life is good. He's had perfect opportunities to ask. For instance.......we were in FL for our 2yr. anniversary with his family, no ring.....we had a picnic in Aug.,whole family there,no ring......I don't know,maybe he just doesn't want to? And YES we have talked about it extensively. He was thinkin like 5yrs(what?????)I was thinkin like now, LOL. We agreed somewhere in the middle. He said he was gonna ask soon, still no ring. Maybe he really just doesn't want to, I don't know!!
katiekayla1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th October 2009, 10:37 AM   #2
Lucky_One
Established Member
 
Lucky_One's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: midwest
Posts: 2,445
You say 2 years, he says 5. You compromise in the middle - 3.5.

But you really didn't MEAN the compromise, did you? You still want now.

What is it that marriage symbolizes to you that you want so badly? As someone who has been divorced and now in a very serious LTR (almost 3 years), I can tell you that it can be very hard to jump back into another marriage. I already thought that I loved someone enough for "forever" - and I was wrong. I already made vows I believed would stand the test of time - and I was wrong. I already thought I knew someone well enough to live with them day in and day out without wanting to kill them - and I was wrong.

Why would you want him to propose with all his family around? Marriages are between two people, and IMHO, proposals should be between 2 people as well. Too many women get way too involved into the logistics of the whole proposal, the ring (and its size and value), the planning, the buying, the parties - and they neglect the marriage in favor of the wedding.
Lucky_One is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th October 2009, 10:45 AM   #3
Lucky_One
Established Member
 
Lucky_One's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: midwest
Posts: 2,445
I just read your other thread about why he won't marry you, and I have to say - having a job for a month and cooking for a month isn't really "proof" that you are ready to be a full partner in this relationship.

Give this some time. You sound like you want the security of marriage only from the security standpoint. Be secure in yourself and in your own abilities to take care of yourself and your daughter with no help from anyone else, so that marriage becomes a bonus instead of a burden on the "providing" partner.

IF you were living on your own, how would you manage? What would you be doing differently in order to survive?
Lucky_One is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th October 2009, 10:45 AM   #4
katiekayla1
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 11
Well, we live together,we act like we're married, where's the REAL commitment here? Are we just playing house or what? I want a BIG proposal because I didn't have that the first time around. I would love him to get creative in the asking. Some woman would prefer something quiet but I'm definetly not that personality type. If he's gonna keep me waiting,it better be good. LOL

Last edited by katiekayla1; 26th October 2009 at 10:49 AM.. Reason: took part of her thread by accident
katiekayla1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th October 2009, 10:56 AM   #5
Lucky_One
Established Member
 
Lucky_One's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: midwest
Posts: 2,445
But he's NOT keeping you waiting. Two years isn't very long at all.

IMHO, yes, you are playing house, but you chose that when you decided to move in with your daughter. Honestly, he is getting all of the benefits of marriage without the legal responsibilities. He gets financial help, he gets cleaning, he gets sex, he gets companionship, he gets cooking, he gets to feel like he is in a parenting role. The SECOND he marries you, he assumes financial responsibility for you - and you haven't exactly been a 50-50 partner in providing for him in the past.

It doesn't matter what "trappings of love" you had or didn't have in your past marriage. What matters is what the MARRIAGE was about, and what this new R can give you and what you can give him in the future that is different and healthier than in the past.

Marriage isn't a ring, it isn't a grand proposal, it isn't a dress designed to look well from the back - it is a partnership between two people who love each other deeply enough that they trust their lives and their futures to each other while they work together to achieve mutual dreams and goals.
Lucky_One is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th October 2009, 11:18 AM   #6
Lauriebell82
Established Member
 
Lauriebell82's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Western PA
Posts: 4,465
I agree with Luckyone that a month isn't THAT long of a time to "prove" you're a great partner.

I don't know Katiekay, it doesn't sound to me like you guys are on the same timeline. He's not in a rush because he already has you and your daughter. Nothing will change if you marry ACCEPT he will assume legal responsibility for two people like LO said.

I think at this point you will either have to "piss or get off the pot" for lack of a better phrase. If you really can't stand waiting then you are going to have to make a decision whether to continue the relationship. Is he worth losing over this?
Lauriebell82 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th October 2009, 11:36 AM   #7
katiekayla1
Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 11
Well, I have my own timeline in my mind. He has to about late spring early summer to pop the question. If no ring, then I'm going to take a BIG step back and look at the whole picture and decide if I'm going to stay or not.I feel like most people have basically said "why buy the cow when the milk is free??"That to me is just crap. Why should how much I financially help be a deciding factor in asking me to marry him? It makes me feel really worthless and like he's dangling that over my head. It's VERY HURTFUL. It's to the point that it's kinda a "sore" subject between us now. Just so EVERYONE knows, I had my own apartment and a good job before I moved in with him! I'm not pathetic,I can stand on my own feet and provide for myself and daughter. He in the beginning, didn't have ANY expectation of me, ESPECIALLY FINANCIAL. He changed the "rules" AFTER I moved in. I did what he asked.
katiekayla1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16th November 2009, 10:31 AM   #8
stillafool
Established Member
 
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 2,319
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lucky_One View Post

Marriage isn't a ring, it isn't a grand proposal, it isn't a dress designed to look well from the back - it is a partnership between two people who love each other deeply enough that they trust their lives and their futures to each other while they work together to achieve mutual dreams and goals.

Exactly! I would think OP would be thinking along these lines since she already has a child and has been down this road before she should know all that other junk doesn't amount to a "hill of beans". What's important is the marriage.
stillafool is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th October 2009, 3:37 PM   #9
ADF
Established Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 375
Quote:
Originally Posted by katiekayla1 View Post
Maybe he really just doesn't want to
Ding-ding-ding-ding-ding! You got it!

You've waited long enough to get a straight answer about this. Demand one. If he waffles, you need to end this relationship. It isn't going anywhere.
ADF is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 26th October 2009, 3:42 PM   #10
Lauriebell82
Established Member
 
Lauriebell82's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Western PA
Posts: 4,465
Quote:
Originally Posted by ADF View Post
Ding-ding-ding-ding-ding! You got it!

You've waited long enough to get a straight answer about this. Demand one. If he waffles, you need to end this relationship. It isn't going anywhere.
He gave her an answer..5 years. They compromised (she didn't REALLY want to though) and decided somewhere in between.

I agree, it's not going anywhere, at least not RIGHT NOW.
Lauriebell82 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14th November 2009, 4:22 AM   #11
ADF
Established Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 375
If he hasn't asked by now, he probably doesn't want to. You may well have to press the issue. Understand that many men are horrified by the idea of marriage. They regard it almost as a kind of death. They associate marriage with the end of freedom, the end of youth, and see it as a path to financial ruin.

What they don't understand is that by refusing to marry the women they love, they are in essence telling them, "I want an easy out. No matter how long we're together, no matter how much we share, no matter how much of your life you've invested in us, I want to be able to walk away at any time, owing you nothing and never having to look back." That is a cruel, brutal message.

Maybe explain it to him that way and he'll get it.
ADF is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

 
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Guess it was over a long time ago? Poiter Breaks and Breaking Up 69 29th August 2009 3:16 PM
I guess it's time... Saxis Separation and Divorce 113 7th August 2009 7:31 PM
I guess it's time for me... Confused4Now The Other Man / Woman 13 30th June 2009 12:41 PM
I guess it's time for me to write it down and share it Ignore the Machine Breaks and Breaking Up 4 2nd March 2004 11:18 AM

 

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 8:48 AM.

Please note: The suggestions and advice offered on this web site are opinions only and are not to be used in the place of professional psychological counseling or medical advice. If you or someone close to you is currently in crisis or in an emergency situation, contact your local law enforcement agency or emergency number.


Copyright © 1997-2009 LoveShack.org. All Rights Reserved.