Christian Seberino wrote:
On Tue, March 27, 2007 1:39 pm, DJA wrote:

And that risk is what again? And don't bring up anything that has a
biological basis because being married (or not) has no direct causal
relationship with biology.

Are you saying there is no risk you can gather that exists in relationships?

The basic fallacy with your argument seems to be an assumption that
people either don't change, or that if they do change, then at least if
they are in a relationship (the formal version - marriage - seeming to
be the only relationship you accept as valid), they will both change in
the same direction.

Well marriage can't force someone to keep their promise anymore than an
excercise partner can guarantee you'll make it to the gym every week.  The
*hope* of course is that when the going gets tough and one feels like
breaking their promises they'll think..."Gee I'm married so I should take
this seriously since it is hard to leave..."

Chris

More often it's harder to stay. And for all the wrong reasons. My observation says that it's more harmful to the individuals in the relationship (or marriage if you insist), especially the children to maintain that relationship past the point where is becomes dysfunctional, destructive, and downright harmful.

I've seen this in my own family, and while I have the context of the history, I still can't see the rationale of maintaining a bad relationship - other than misery loves company, living with the devil you know, and just plain denial and fear of the unknown.

--
   Best Regards,
      ~DJA.


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