BackInTheGame78
Moderator
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2014
- Messages
- 16,402
- Reaction score
- 18,433
The perspective you’re describing is a beautiful notion, but it’s also an idealized version of marriage, not the reality most people experience. It assumes two people grow in compatible directions and remain equally committed to adapting together. Unfortunately, the data and human behavior suggest that’s the exception rather than the rule.In marriage you grow together. You share those changes and that process of evolving alongside your spouse. Babies do not come with a user manual. Life happens outside expectations. When you choose a life partner as an idealistic young person you have this idea that you are in it together, ride or die, come hell or high water. It is a decision that requires a degree of faith, belief in something bigger than yourself, a level of maturity.
It is a level of committment you cannot experience except through doing, much like being a parent. It must be lived experience. Without that experience you do not grow in that way. You can wait until your 40s to marry. You still will not grasp what marriage really is until you do it.....but by the time a person is that many years older, the immaturity borne of inexperience still exists, but the idealism of youth is severely eroded and replaced with a jadedness and selfishness that the hope of youth often finds a way to transcend.
I married a never married childless man in his 40s. He has had to undergo the maturation process that a marriage committment requires. He still carried all his expectations from youth (which being married has a way of dashing, but replacing with something much more meaningful and valuable, and earned as you grow together.)......
It is a process of moving from independence to a higher plane of interdependence. And an individual cannot do that alone.
We humans are more resilient in youth, less jaded by life. It is also when the body and mind has more energy to bear the challenges of childrearing...the recovery is faster in youth. So you will not be suddenly wise enough as an individual. You have to learn it by doing, and you have a longer runway to recover from mistakes in youth.....mistakes within the marriage I am talking about....and you have more time to entwine your lives into a meaningful partnership.
You are likely now too jaded to allow yourself the leap of faith marriage requires. So you may rob yourself of something profoundly meaningful that you do not know is possible.....
But deep down that is something all
humans yearn for.
First, the idea that couples simply “grow together” ignores a fundamental truth about early adulthood: people change dramatically in their 20s. Values, career goals, personalities, lifestyles, and priorities often evolve rapidly during that decade. Two people who were compatible at 21 can easily become very different people by 28. If those changes happen in different directions, the marriage doesn’t automatically strengthen, it often becomes strained or dissolves.
Second, the belief that commitment alone carries a marriage through those changes is romantic but unrealistic. Commitment matters, but compatibility still matters just as much. When core values diverge, about money, lifestyle, children, ambition, or personal growth, no amount of idealism can permanently bridge that for most couples.
Third, the statistical reality doesn’t support the idea that early marriage produces stronger partnerships overall. Large demographic studies consistently show that people who marry very young have significantly higher divorce rates than those who marry later. If the “grow together through faith and commitment” model were broadly reliable, we would expect the opposite pattern.
Another problem with the argument is that it treats maturity as something that only develops inside marriage. In reality, many people develop emotional maturity, empathy, compromise skills, and interdependence through friendships, long-term relationships, work, and life experience. Marriage isn’t the only path to those qualities.
So while the “grow together and build a life through faith” story certainly happens for some couples, it represents a successful outcome, not the typical starting condition. For many people, waiting until their identities, goals, and values are more stable actually increases the likelihood that the partnership will last.
In other words, the ideal is inspiring, but statistically it works out well for a minority of couples, not the majority.
Finally, the idea that older unmarried people are “too jaded” overlooks another possibility: experience can make people more deliberate and self-aware about who they choose as a partner. Waiting doesn’t necessarily mean avoiding commitment, it can mean choosing it more carefully.

