Pressure
- This is the influence friends, family, society and your own
psyche place upon you that give the message "You should be in a
relationship, and if you’re not something is wrong with you." Key
questions to ask would be a) Are most of your friends part of a couple,
but you are still single? b) Are you unmarried and over thirty? c) Are
you the last person in your family to "settle down?" d) Are
you recently divorced? In our society we can really heap lots of
pressure on unmarried family members and friends. It is time that we
leave them alone and learn to appreciate and value their singleness.
Loneliness
and Desperation - Too many
individuals only get married because they are desperate or lonely. Dr.
Angelis is right when she says "when you are feeling lonely or
desperate, you are much more likely to make poor love choices and end up
in unfulfilling relationships." A lonely and desperate person will
remain lonely after marriage. Some people are so emotionally empty that
they are desperate for anyone to marry. In the end these persons end up
in a painful relationship.
Sexual
Hunger - Some people are so
sexually driven that they end up seeking someone to care for but in
reality, they want sex more than long-lasting intimate relationships.
Some people act as if they are "on heat" like dogs, and during
those times they find a lover to share their passion. Sometimes the
passion remains until the wedding day, but after the wedding day it
diminishes into the abyss of frustration and pain.
Distraction
From Your Own Life - Many get
married not because they have found the right person "but as an
excuse to avoid their own life." Evaluating the following
statements may help you know whether you are avoiding dealing with your
own life?
-
I have a
history of unfullfilling relationships
-
I don’t go
for long periods of time without being in a relationship
-
The
relationships I get involved in are very time-consuming.
-
When I’m in
a relationship, I devote less time to my own interests and friends.
-
As a rule I
don’t enjoy spending time alone, and would rather be with other
people
-
I find it
easier to motivate others to solve their own problems than to
motivate my self to solve my own.
"Some people
have relationships because they are bored with the lack of passion and
purpose in their own lives, and rather than looking within to find out
why they feel that way, they get involved in a love affair and make that
their purpose."
To
Avoid Growing Up - This is a
really big one in our country. There are too many people who enter
marriage simply because they want to be "taken care of." These
persons usually become dependant emotionally on those they love. This
kind of relationship can usually be identified when a) there is a big
age difference between partners. b) there is a big difference in
financial and professional success. c) there is a big contrast in life
experience level between the partners.
Guilt
- There are many who remain in a pre-marriage relationship
because they are afraid what might happen if they left. They may feel
guilty to leave because they did not treat the person as nicely as the
person treated them. "When you decide to be with someone out of
guilt and not love, you are ripping them and yourself off."
To
Fill Up Your Emotional and Spiritual Emptiness - Dr. Angelis
clearly writes: "If you have deep places of emptiness within you,
no partner, regardless of how much they love you, will be able to fill
that emptiness.