My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Relationships

*Is long term cohabitation just commitment phobia?*

112 replies

Wonderpet · 16/03/2009 11:38

How many women kid themselves that they are ok with 'living together' when secretly, they view marriage a sign of commitment, but they don't feel they can ask their man to marry them? Or am I the only one that thinks this way?

OP posts:
Report
plantsitter · 16/03/2009 11:40

Are you married?

DP and I will know each other for the rest of our lives now DD is here. Much bigger commitment than a day in a church, a disco and a fancy frock imo.

Report
fryalot · 16/03/2009 11:44

I've been married.

dp has been married.

We've both had our day in church (well, his was in a registry office, but ykwim)

Our children are a much bigger commitment than an actual marriage certificate.

Sometimes I wish we were married, but generally when I get fed up of people calling our children by my name (which is the name of my ex husband as I never reverted back to my maiden name) or when I realise the toaster's broken again and if we had a wedding we'd get loads as presents

Report
paolosgirl · 16/03/2009 11:45

A marriage is not a day in a church, a disco or a fancy frock - it's a heck of a lot more than that. A child means you are commited to the child, not necessarily to each other.

Report
rubyslippers · 16/03/2009 11:46

a marriage is not a day in church - that is a wedding

some people don't look beyond that though

Report
MrsSeanBean · 16/03/2009 11:51

Everyone's circumstances are different, but to answer the OP, yes I think the same. Besides it should be the man doing the asking! [old fashioned emoticon]

Report
plantsitter · 16/03/2009 11:52

OK I was being flippant. But I have made a private, life-long commitment to DP. I don't see why this shows commitment phobia. Marriage is great for some people, just not for me. Doesn't mean I am incapable of committing to anyone or anything.

Report
seeker · 16/03/2009 11:53

Agggggggggggggggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!

My "unmarried" relationship has outlived all - and I mean all - the relationships of our contemporaries. My brother has been married 3 times in the time dp and I have been together. No. Living together is NOT some sort of sub-marriage for women who can't get men to marry them. That is insulting to both women and men. It is an active choice taken by 2 adults who see no reason to make a public display of their relationship and have no religious beliefs that make marriage essential for them.

Report
MrsSeanBean · 16/03/2009 11:53

If you have children with a partner, that is a commitment in itself. But if you are living together without DC it's slightly different.

Report
phdlife · 16/03/2009 11:54

Dh and I lived together for 6.5 years before I finally told him I was ready to get married. He'd been making noises for years, but I wasn't up for it - not that I was commitment-phobic, just that I couldn't get my head around that kind of responsibility. Then one day I woke up and it clicked. We married a few months later and it's still going nicely with 1 and a bit dc's, but I couldn't have even considered them before I was well and truly ready, iyswim.

Report
paolosgirl · 16/03/2009 11:55

I have a friend who has been with her DP for 7 years, they have 2 children together and own a house together. They got engaged, then bought a house then had a child, but somewhere along the lines 'forgot' to get married.

She would like to get married now, he says they can't afford it (because to them a wedding means a big expensive affair), and she's miffed because he would happily spend £15K on a car.

Report
Wonderpet · 16/03/2009 11:56

My friend lived withher boyfried for seven years. She insisted that she didn't want marriage. They split up and then two years later they got back together when he proposed?

OP posts:
Report
themildmanneredjanitor · 16/03/2009 11:56

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

lal123 · 16/03/2009 11:58

I've been with DP for 16 years now - own our house, 1 dd and another on the way. I don't think that our not being married says anything about our committment to each other. Getting married wouldn't prove he (or I) was more committed - and I don't need that sort of proof anyway??

Report
RealityIsMyOnlyDelusion · 16/03/2009 11:59

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

MrsSeanBean · 16/03/2009 11:59

She would like to get married now, he says they can't afford it

Report
themildmanneredjanitor · 16/03/2009 12:00

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

paolosgirl · 16/03/2009 12:02

I completely agree, MrsSB. For whatever reason, they feel that a wedding should be a big affair, and if you're not going to spend a lot then it's not worth doing. I'm afraid I don't share that sentiment at all.

Report
dustbuster · 16/03/2009 12:02

I think the legal benefits of marriage are overstated, to be honest. OK, there are some e.g. widow's allowance, but not too many that cannot be got by e.g. putting a house in joint names.

Report
MrsSeanBean · 16/03/2009 12:04

I would never have lived with a man who was not prepared to marry me. If he didnt want marriage - fine - his choice - off he went to find someone like minded.
If neither party wants to get marriage that's their prerogative.
But IMO it's not good for self esteem to be with someone who doesn't want to get married when you do/ ie. who is not as committed to the relationship as you presumably are.

Report
themildmanneredjanitor · 16/03/2009 12:04

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

paolosgirl · 16/03/2009 12:05

You might want to read this, Dustbuster

www.adviceguide.org.uk/index/family_parent/family/cohabitation_and_marriage_legal_differences.htm

Report
dustbuster · 16/03/2009 12:05

Well yes indeed themildmanneredjanitor, because the divorce rate in this country is incredibly low.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

paolosgirl · 16/03/2009 12:06

More people who live together split up than those who are married!

Report
plantsitter · 16/03/2009 12:07

Actually I don't feel especially strongly that I don't believe in marriage, I just find it grossly insulting that people feel free to tell me I'm a commitment-phobe because I choose not to do it.

I think SOME people don't believe in marriage because it is rooted in patriarchal tradition, where women are bought, sold and given away like property.

Not saying I feel like that, mind.

Report
seeker · 16/03/2009 12:07

"if you love someone enough to liv with them, haesex with them and have children with them-then i think you should get married."

Why?

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.