Archive for April, 2009

Marriage and Young People

Still reflecting on my wedding anniversary this week, I was interested to read an article published in the Sydney Morning Herald today, in which American researcher Mark Regnerus implores young people to “take the plunge” because “deferring marriage is un-healthy and unwealthy”.

I do see Regneruses point of view.  He reports that his research on young adults’ relationships found that “many women report feeling peer pressure against seriously thinking of marriage until they are at least in their late 20s.”  This is certainly the case for many people I know (women and men).  When I look around at friends in their late 20s like me, it is only in the last year or two that some of us have started tying the knot; having kids is even rarer.  And he hits the nail on the head when he argues that parental pressure to complete our education, to launch our careers and become financially independent before even contemplating marriage is a driving factor behind the increased average marriage age.  Most people I know have certainly been given that advice.

But far from the picture that Regnerus paints of young people driven (by their parents or otherwise) to achieve experience, control and power in their lives before ‘settling down’ is another factor.  Not once did his article mention the increase in divorce rates (which reached a peak in Australia in 2001) that my generation lived through.  As a child of parents who divorced when I was 20 years old, I can testify to the devastating effect that divorce has on the kids’ sense of caution when it comes to signing themselves up to that life-long treaty which has the potential to end in the most bitter and destructive process imaginable.  In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if the increased caution leading up to marriage these days actually accounted for the decrease we are now seeing in divorce rates compared to the last two decades!

When I say that young people have an increased sense of ‘caution‘, however, I don’t just mean that we are worrying ourselves about choosing ‘the right one‘ – although for some who have seen the effects of choosing ‘the wrong one’, this no doubt remains a concern.  Even if your parents aren’t divorced, these days the chances are that someone close to you has gone through the experience.  Throughout high school I was acutely aware of the effects that divorce had on my closest friends.  Everyone had their go – of seeing the counsellor, of acting out a little, of milking teachers for sympathy concessions…and of grieving.  My feeling is that our generation is mostly cautious about being able to get their marriage off to ‘the right start‘, as a way of honouring their own marriage and distinguishing their marriage as one built on well-established trust and resilience.  We feel we owe that to our future kids.

What Regnerus also fails to mention are the many couples who live in de facto relationships – who consider themselves as ‘married’ in the sense that they are emotionally, financially and even legally joined, permanently, but who for whatever reason haven’t been through the wedding process.  Speaking from my own experience, although I do admit feeling a bit ‘different’ since being married, there were many years before the wedding that we considered ourselves married in every way bar officially, and yet the only categories of relationship listed by Regnerus besides ‘married’ were ‘single’ or ‘cohabitors’.  A real de facto relationship is about much more than living together, or ‘cohabiting’, and in today’s increasingly secular society it is the  real start of a ‘permanent’ relationship – the wedding is more of a celebration of it.

Which leads me to another factor that wasn’t accounted for in Regneruses article: the cost of a wedding, and the effect of the contemporary trend of couples paying for all or part of their own wedding.  Maybe it is because our generation is marrying later, which makes them feel a bit silly as independent, wealth earning adults to ask thier parents to foot the bill.  It is logical that young people need more time these days to save up for their wedding, especially given the pressure to engage in that other costly endeavour – entering the property market.

I must say I was a bit insulted by the last paragraph of the article, in which Regnerus praised a 23 year old student on her decision to get married, contrasting her to the “many young people [who] mark their days by hitting the clubs, incessantly checking Facebook, and obsessing about their poor job prospects”.  This comment is a slap in the face to young people trying to relieve stress and maintain personal relationships to balance the extended education and training needed in this increasingly credentialised society, who now rightly worry about their job security in a declining global economy.  It also wrongly (and somewhat disrespectfully) positions marriage as a kind of panacea to the ills of a misspent youth.

*sigh*

People are full of advice when it comes to what young people should do to have a better life.  This is understandable; welcome and useful, even.  But we do ask that you give us some credit, and don’t try to oversimplify the problems of this generation.  It is not that we are so cynical and unromantic that we won’t settle for anything other than a “recipe for success”.  I love my husband, and we knew we were meant for each other from a very young age.  We took our time getting married because we were in no rush, plain and simple.  I think that’s pretty ‘healthy’, really.

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First Wedding Anniversary

A very self indulgent blog post today to share that today/Sunday was my first wedding anniversary 🙂

A lovely time was had by all – Mr K. and I like to celebrate things over whole weekends, giving us more excuses to eat out!  After a lazy day shopping we ended up in Newtown for dinner on Saturday night.  We had no reservations, and had braced for the dreaded King Street wander…eventually found a great restaurant called Twelve.  They were full, but offered to call back in 15 minutes when a table was free – how nice!  We had a rocket, parmesan and pear salad, and while hubby had a rump steak I had fig, basil and chilli linguine.  So delicious!  I highly recommend Twelve to anyone living in Sydney – it’s at the Marly-end of King Street, in between the Vintage Cellars (a lovely New Zealand Pinot Noir from there, thanks very much) and the 7 Eleven, across from Burgerlicious.

We thought we’d go for a drive down to the Rocks and under the bridge, but alas twas ANZAC day and much revelry had gotten the roads closed…so we ended up going for a very late coffee at Badde Manors in Glebe, where we were soothed by some jazz music and a very 50s feel.  Two lattes and some carrot cake later, and the it was home for us.

Saturday celebrations really set us up well for a stress-free real-Anniversary on Sunday.  Day consisted of a sleep in, a big bacon and egg breakfast, a little bit of laundry and a lot of general lazing around.  A perfect day for someone on the brink of returning to school next week – one last holiday day.  We were reliably informed that the gift de choix for first anniversaries is paper, and bought tickets to see The Grates on 8th May as a present to each other. So…more anniversary celebrations in two weeks 🙂

And…my thoughts on being married, one year on?  Other than slightly amused at having a ‘first’ anniversary, after being together for 15 years 😉  Rather than try to find words for my own philosophy, I suggest that now more than ever I see the value of both of the following metaphors, taken from the readings we chose for our wedding ceremony.  The first is from a poem by Kahlil Gibran:

…Give your hearts, but not into each other’s keeping,
And stand together, yet not too near together,
For the pillars of the temple stand apart,
And the oak tree and the cypress grow not in shadow.

The tree metaphor a little different in Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, by Louis de Bernieres :

You have to work out whether your roots have so entwined together that it is inconceivable that you should ever part.
Those that truly love have roots that grow towards each other underground, and when all the pretty blossoms have fallen from their branches, they find that they are one tree and not two.

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Beautiful Math #TED

An absolutely excellent TED talk from Margaret Wertheim: The beautiful math that links coral, crochet and hyperbolic geometry.

This talk reminded me a lot of the intersection between mathematics, beauty and life that is explored in McBurney/Complicite’s play A Disappearing Number.  From the production’s website:

Threaded through this pattern of stories and ideas are questions. About mathematics and beauty; imagination and the nature of infinity; about what is continuous and what permanent; how we are attached to the past and how we affect the future; how we create and how we love.

What a delightfully philospohical space to sit and think in!  Enjoy.

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Save the Net – sign the petition

The Federal Government is planning to force all Australian servers to filter internet traffic and block any material the Government deems ‘inappropriate’. Under the plan, the Government can add any ‘unwanted’ site to a secret blacklist.

Testing has already begun on systems that will slow our internet by up to 87%, make it more expensive, miss the vast majority of inappropriate content and accidentally block up to 1 in 12 legitimate sites. Our children deserve better protection – and that won’t be achieved by wasting millions on this deeply flawed system.

GetUp.org.au

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Twitter #TED

Recently for some reason unknown to me I have found myself often amongst students and colleagues hating on Twitter.  The thing is…they haven’t tried it.

Of course, people are allowed to have opinions, even when they are not based on any real knowledge or experience.  But I have been a bit surprised by how quickly, and with what venom, people are ready to leap into attack mode when someone mentions Twitter.

Wow, some people must really think they are important – as if anyone cares about your sad life.

Don’t people have anything better to do?

Who could be bothered checking to see if someone posted some random note.

As if I want to hear about the boring details of someone else’s life!

It’s a place where sad-cases can find out what P. Diddy is doing every minute of everyday.

Narcissists!

Yesterday a penny dropped for me, and I realised a big reason why I find these comments so unsettling: Why are people so determined to express how much they DON’T care about anyone else’s world?  Sure, meeting in person is a ‘nicer’ way to be closer to people you know, but these comments don’t smack of pro-embodied-socialising; they just reek of tall poppy syndrome and a bunch of I-don’t-care.

I’m hoping some teachers on our school technology committee will start dabbling in Twitter soon, so I can start making the rich professional connections in school that I currently need to seek out of school.  I found this TED Talk on Twitter very interesting, and I’ll pass it on to my colleagues soon:

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