Posted in its entirety from Slate.com by Julia Shaw
These days, young married couples are an anomaly.
In pop culture, they usually get married at a surprise wedding: Think Andy and
April in Parks and
Recreation or Jessa and
Thomas-John (who’s not really young) in Girls.
Before the bouquet toss, viewers were counting down to the divorce episode, probably
because celebrities have taught us that it won’t last. Britney Spears’ first
marriage was annulled within hours, and she racked up a second divorce before
age 26. At age 22, Jessica Simpson scored a reality television show about her
marriage to Nick Lachey: The couple divorced three seasons (er, years) later.
Is it any wonder the world scoffed at Miley Cyrus’
plan for three weddings?
And pop culture tracks reality. Only 21 percent of
millennials (those ages 18-29) are married, and the median age for marriage is
the highest in generations: almost 27 for women and 29 for men. By comparison,
29 percent of Generation X, 42 percent of Boomers, and 54 percent of the Silent
Generation (born 1928 through 1945) were married by that age, according to a 2010 Pew
Research Survey.
According to
Pew, 60 percent of unmarried men and women want to tie the knot. But
they just aren’t in any hurry. Marriage these days signals that you’ve figured
out how to be a grown-up. You’ve played the field, backpacked Europe, and held
a bartending gig to supplement an unpaid internship. You’ve “arrived,” having
finished school, settled into a career path, bought a condo, figured out who
you are, and found your soul mate. The fairytale wedding is your gateway into
adult life. But in my experience, this idea about marriage as the end of the
road is pretty misguided and means couples are missing out on a lot of the fun.
I’m a married millennial. I walked down the
aisle at 23. My husband, David, was 25. We hadn’t arrived. I had a job; he, a
job offer and a year left in law school. But we couldn’t buy a house or even
replace the car when it died a few months into our marriage. We lived in a
small basement apartment, furnished with secondhand Ikea. We did not have
Internet (checking email required a trip to the local coffee shop) or reliable
heat.
Marriage wasn’t something we did after we’d grown
up—it was how we have grown up and grown together. We’ve endured the hardships
of typical millennials: job searches, job losses, family deaths, family
conflict, financial fears, and career concerns. The stability, companionship,
and intimacy of marriage enabled us to overcome our challenges and develop as
individuals and a couple. We learned how to be strong for one another, to
comfort, to counsel, and to share our joys and not just our problems.
In 2011, my husband’s law firm collapsed. In the
weeks before that, he routinely worked until midnight, plus weekends, for three
different partners, none of whom seemed to be heading to the same firm. Would
all this work be for nothing? Would the partners he worked for find new firms?
Would he be able to come too? Would he find another legal job considering the
anemic legal market? To support him through this difficult time, I would stay
up late to welcome him home, no matter how late. I’d practice interviews with
him. We inventoried the family budget: no more fancy coffee, dining out,
Zipcars, or shopping—just student loans, rent, and food. When David had job
offers with other law firms, he called me to confer.
For every troubling, vexing, perplexing question or
decision, we offered each other advice, talked through the argument, and
steered each other through the periods of self-doubt. When I was ready to talk
myself out of applying to fellowships, he persuaded me to go for it. He was my
practice audience for my first radio interview, television interview, and every
major presentation. His good judgment makes it easy to share my burdens with
him—and my good fortunes, too. Because your spouse knows the extent of your
troubles, your successes become that much more meaningful. While I may not tell
my close friends or my parents the details of a new opportunity, I don’t need
to hold back with David. Being married young has afforded us unmatched
companionship and support in any circumstance.
Nowadays, one’s 20s are reserved for finishing
college, pursuing graduate degrees, and establishing careers. Relationships
are, at best, not as interesting as a prestigious job opening at Cravath or a
scholarship at Yale. At worst, relationships distract from these opportunities.
I started out thinking this way, too. When I was entering
college, my philosophy was “men die, but your college degree is forever.” I
imagined myself an independent, spirited sort of woman. I wrote off the girls I
knew from high school in Texas who didn’t finish college or who selected their
universities based on their boyfriends’ plans. Getting a “ring by spring” was
nice, I supposed, but it wasn’t a grand achievement. Getting a 4.0—now we were
talking.
I wasn’t anti-marriage. I thought I would get
married, but it would be later after a flurry of accomplishments. When David
and I started dating, his senior year and my sophomore year, I worried he would
derail my education. He definitely had all the qualities I wanted in a man:
intelligence, ambition, good character, plus he was a true gentleman. Still, I asked
him, “You’re not asking me out because you want to get married by graduation?”
This was a Christian college we went to, so my question was not out of bounds.
I still regret those words. Looking back, my artificial, rigid timeline of
success almost derailed my real happiness.
What I did not realize was how thoroughly marriage
would jump-start our independence. On paper, our unmarried peers looked more
carefree. But many of them also relied on their parents to supplement their
income, drove home for long weekends and holidays, or stayed on their parents’
health insurance and cellphone plans (even though they had decent jobs!). I put
David on my health insurance. We bought our own family cellphone plan and
Netflix account. When we visited our parents once a year, we paid for the plane
tickets and still did our own laundry. We loved our parents and siblings, but
marriage made us realize that we were now a separate family unit.
Months into our marriage, my grandfather died. I
was crushed. The funeral was stressful. I wasn’t able to explain to David the
backstories on everyone in my extended family: He couldn’t remember who was
married to whom and certainly couldn’t tell my identical twin uncles apart.
Still, David comforted me, navigated the family drama, grounded me, and made me
thankful for the promise of a long marriage.
Sure, being married young entailed sacrifices. We
had to be particularly careful about money. David took the bar exam shortly
before our first wedding anniversary. This should have warranted a lavish
vacation: Most new lawyers celebrate finishing the bar exam with a trip to
Europe or Asia. That was too expensive. Instead, we pricelined a hotel five
subway stops away and had dinner at Pizzeria Paradiso. For the anniversary
portion of the celebration, we special-ordered a cake from our favorite bakery
and recounted our favorite memories from our first year of marriage.
Sometimes people delay marriage because they are
searching for the perfect soul mate. But that view has it backward. Your spouse
becomes your soul mate after you've made those vows to each other in front of
God and the people who matter to you. You don’t marry someone because he’s your
soul mate; he becomes your soul mate because you married him.
Marriage doesn’t require a big bank account, a dazzling resumé, or a
televised wedding—it requires maturity, commitment, and a desire to grow up
together. My husband and I married young. We don't have a fairytale marriage or
a storybook ending because our story continues. Going forward, we anticipate
new challenges and joys: children, new jobs, new hobbies, new cities, family
weddings, and family funerals. There will be things we can’t predict. But one
thing is for certain: We are committed to each other and we will grow through
them. We don't have the details of the later chapters, but we know who the two
main characters are.
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