
My wedding dayNext month I’ll celebrate my tenth wedding anniversary. I’m 29. Yup, I was a teenage bride, and before you ask, no, I was not knocked up. It’s a cultural anomaly to get married so young these days, forgoing the wild ‘discover yourself at the end of a beer bong while wearing a wet T-shirt to show off your still perky breasts’ years, but it’s a decision I’ve never regretted.
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There’s an article out in the Huffington Post by Jennifer Nagy highlighting her failed marriage and the failed marriages of her friends as the basis for raising the legal age for entering matrimony to 25. She writes:
People under the age of 25 are still discovering themselves; they are figuring out what is most important in their lives. They are discovering the joys (and heartache) of being in a relationship, and then the partying that often characterizes life between relationships.
24-year-old Steven Crowder (who’s marrying his lovely-on-the-inside-and-out fiancée in August, by the way) hit the nail on the head with his response to Nagy’s narcissistic ramblings:
Let me see. Today I am somebody who seeks to be the best believer, husband, father, businessman and man of integrity that I can be. Looking back, when I was fourteen, I aspired to… be the best believer, husband, father, businessman and man of integrity that I can be.
What is this obsession with discovering yourself and finding out what is important in life? Where are the core values of integrity, honesty, responsibility, and kindness? Ms. Nagy thinks it’s impossible to know at 21 what you’ll want when you’re 29, and in part, she’s right. When I was 21, I didn’t know how many kids I’d eventually want, where I’d be living, or exactly what I’d be doing professionally. But those are all peripheral circumstances, not who I am.
Probability of divorce has less to do with what age a person gets married than their reasons for getting married in the first place. Ms. Nagy says that she got married after dating her boyfriend for five years because it was just the thing to do. When the excitement of the wedding was over, she and her new husband had no idea where to go from there.
Getting married because it’s the thing to do is not a good reason to tie the knot. A wedding is a day; a marriage should be a lifetime. It doesn’t matter if you’re 18 or 85, understanding that marriage is ultimately about sharing your life with another person through all the highs and the lows is a much better place to start than because your relationship has reached a plateau and it seems like the next logical step.
Ms. Nagy doubts that people that get married young can make it long-term because puppy love doesn’t last forever. Of course it doesn’t. Over the years the butterflies melt into something different, something better, something more. When I think back to my wedding day almost ten years ago, I realize I barely knew my husband. But I knew what marriage was, and he and I made a commitment to love, honor, and cherish one another until death parts us.
I have grown up this past decade. I’ve done it with my best friend and life partner right by my side. I wouldn’t trade it for anything, let alone for a decade of self-discovery through partying.


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Comments 156
My parents married each other at 22 and they are coming up on they 37th anniversary in Sept. Don't say that people can't find true love young and that getting married young always ends up in divorce! I may not have married until 26, but my husband and I met when I was 22 and he was 21 and we were engaged 6 months after we started dating. We only waited to marry b/c we wanted to finish college first. We've been together for 12 years and married for 9!
My late MIL and my FIL were married very young, I think she was 16 or 17 and he was only a couple years older. They were together for more than 30 years when she passed away in 2008. He remarried only a week and a half ago, to a woman who had went to the same school as him, a woman who had ALSO married her high school sweetheart. Her husband passed away only a few months after my MIL. She is a comlumnist for the local paper who had been writing about her life after the loss of the love of her life. My FIL had written into her column and they started communicating. The anniversary of their first date turned into their wedding. I look at them and see COURAGE. They KNOW better than so many people who get married that nothing in life is guaranteed but they still took the plunge.
All this to say, life is meant to be LIVED! If you feel like you're ready to take on the commitment of marriage, go for it! I don't know anybody who would say on their death bed "I wish I never took that shot at love."
I got hitched at age 16. My husband was 19. Four kids and two grandbabies later, we will be celebrating 27 years in September. "Looks like we made it.Look how far we've come, my baby" Shania Twain Lyrics :)
I Married at 23, celebrating 6 years this Sunday, actually. I still love my husband so much. He is my best friend and I really can't fathom life without him. It's not the number of years you are alive that counts, its your mental maturity. I was always told I was an old soul. I never really wanted to party (I went a few times, unimpressed by what I saw and hang overs suck). I suppose if I was more like a pop starlette then it would not have worked. You need to be ready to settle down, mentally. If it's not the right time - be it at age 22 or at 42 - your marraige will be difficult and could fail.
I love this article.
I think it's jealousy that a good amount of marriages that do last have been by people that started out "young". I always hear about the high school sweethearts being married 10,20,30,40,50 years.
i'm glad I married mine.
Hubby and I were 21 when we got married. We're 33, we share a beautiful daughter and we're still best friends. I couldn't ask for more.
Young marriages don't fare too well statistically, but there will always be plenty of exceptions to the rule -- as so many commenters here seem to prove. Personally, I married young and it failed for the reasons the author of the would-be law describes. I married again much later and it is much better this time as I am mature enough for the commitment. But to make a law requiring people to be 25 to be married? I think there are many things that government can and should regulate better, but this is not one of them. This would truly be an unwelcome, unnecessary nanny-state law.
I am a statistic i am 20 and going through a divorce. but i am loving that her marriage is surviving.
I will be the ONE person here whose story is different because I married at 34. I did the travelling and my fair share of partying (but please note, it was not trashy or slovenly drunken debauchery or anything, more like socialising). And while I respect and even envy people who have commented here, because I would have loved to marry young and have children young, I just..... hadn't met Mr Right. I couldn't just conjure him up out of thin air so I had to wait!
The only thing about this article that I do not like (not the comments, but the article) is the implication that Ms Nagy's comments represent everyone who does not marry young. Not so. I had the so-called "core values of integrity, honesty, responsibility, and kindness" young - just because I didn't tie the knot does not mean they weren't there.
Make sure not to judge, Jenny. Happy Anniversary.