I thought this was good. It's secular, but has some great points.
How we end up marrying the wrong people | Philosophers' Mail
How we end up marrying the wrong people | Philosophers' Mail
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I think that knowing yourself is a big part of the equation. But part of learning about yourself means moving out and living on your own plus dating and interacting with others to determine if what you think you want in another is what would actually work out.
Though I do wonder how one is to determine what their needs and desires will be for intimacy if they remain chaste? In that area the difference between what you think will work vs reality can be miles apart.
Facebook is an electronic entity. It can't "do" anything. It is the people using Facebook who have led themselves into actions that cause the demise of their marriages. And really "Facebook makes us sadder"? So now Facebook is responsible for our feelings of envy and lust?Studies have shown that Facebook has led to widespread demise of marriages, discontentment with our current lives ..
I don't know if I believe one has to do all of that to know what they want. I did not date many people and I met my wife my freshmen year in college. I think people just either need to be from a real good family or maybe went through a lot in life to have that depth have self realization to know ok this is who I want and why. I will say that marriage is not easy it takes hard work and respecting each other and loving each other enough to grow together. I want to know what you think makes our generation different from generations that married way earlier? I think it depends on what we expect from our children and how we raise them to either know themselves fully or need to be seperated from us to reach self realization.
I think with two like minded individuals who know themselves can walk the distance between "think will work" and what actually works. Even the constitution has amendments.
They say character is what you do when no one is watching. If one has enough opportunities to learn about themselves in college then great.
The big difference is that somewhere between the last few generations and now, the need or pressure to get and stay married has reduced greatly while focus on individual happiness has increased. Additionally, divorce was harder and had some stigma, forcing couples to work it out.
Look at the current wave of baby boomers divorcing sometimes after 20+ years. I suspect the current wave stayed together for the kids but are now empty nesters. Without some kind of outside force a large number of people can't stay together. That is why finding out if you have what it takes to work through the hard parts of married life is something one needs to determine about themselves now that outside factors have less power to keep then together.
The issue of marrying the wrong person is a valid topic for someone who hasn't found a partner yet. After your hitched, we shouldn't treat it like buying the wrong product at Walmart-- oops, got the wrong one. I use their return policy and go get the right one.
I believe a lot of young Christians could be helped if they got some more teaching on what kind of spouse to look for. Proverbs has a lot of useful information on what kind of men and women to avoid, and what traits to work on. And of course there are other books.
Generally thinking of your marriage as "I married the wrong person" can be harmful for the marriage.
They say character is what you do when no one is watching. If one has enough opportunities to learn about themselves in college then great.
The big difference is that somewhere between the last few generations and now, the need or pressure to get and stay married has reduced greatly while focus on individual happiness has increased. Additionally, divorce was harder and had some stigma, forcing couples to work it out.
Look at the current wave of baby boomers divorcing sometimes after 20+ years. I suspect the current wave stayed together for the kids but are now empty nesters. Without some kind of outside force a large number of people can't stay together. That is why finding out if you have what it takes to work through the hard parts of married life is something one needs to determine about themselves now that outside factors have less power to keep then together.

I just want to say that this article immediately started on the wrong premise with this:
Facebook is an electronic entity. It can't "do" anything. It is the people using Facebook who have led themselves into actions that cause the demise of their marriages. And really "Facebook makes us sadder"? So now Facebook is responsible for our feelings of envy and lust?
The blame and responsibility is put in the wrong place. It is up to the individual to deal with their feelings, and if they can't, then they should stay off the internet.
Ya know?