Beer Baron wrote:
In reply to carguy123:
Then both parties should be talking to all four parents asking for their blessing to join the two families together.
You are right. In the ideal world there'd not be much talking to be done. Time and actions would have made it unnecessary. It would b e a given that everyone is happy with the pairing so marriage is the next logical step as they've already been integrated into the family. Getting engaged is supposed to be a joyous happening and not a nerve wracking one.
Now here's the latest. Apparently my daughter has spent a lot of time with his 'rents, but he's actively blocking us from getting together with his parents until after he pops the question. We have to wonder why, and also why he's not been forthcoming about other things. I mean if he went so far as to ask us to give our blessings you'd think he would have been trying to really ingratiate himself into the family. In other words trying to sell us on the idea.
Since I wasn't bowled over with his offer to take my daughter off my hands and wanted to know a little something about him, he's being even more evasive than normal about talking about himself and is avoiding the whole family. (daughter is in L.A. working for a week or 2).
So a Blessing is definitely out of the question. His active evasiveness makes our radar go crazy and now my wife is wondering if we shouldn't be proactive and talk to my daughter "before she makes a terrible mistake!"
I'm a little more let's give our girl a little credit. Also since she hasn't talked to anyone about the possibility of getting married we could hope she just tells him they need to wait a while longer. Unfortunately she doesn't know the whole family has reservations about him since we didn't want to complicate her relationship. We've talked amongst ourselves but never expressed reservations to her because we didn't think this was that kind of relationship yet. So we're worried that she'll be caught off guard by the grand event he has planned might make her go with the moment. Seems to be a you're damned if you do and damned if you don't type of situation developing.
I come from a dysfunctional family and my life didn't truly begin until I got married and got away from family. We've sheltered our kids from that kind of atmosphere so she's not really aware of how degrading a life tied to the wrong person can be and that's presuming he's not abusive.
When your kids get married you want to be joyous about their choices. You want it to be that you are actively rooting for them to get married and want it to be that you'd like to go up to the young man and beg him to ask your daughter. Then you want them to ride off in the sunset on a white charger. Yeah right! At the very least you want their life to be better and easier than yours.
We also have just found out he's basically on the rebound from a 5 year relationship that went bad about a month before he met our daughter.
He could be the best guy on the whole planet and might be the best husband in the whole wide world, but at this stage how would we know. Are we being overly protective and we should be rooting for him? It's telling that after 9 months not a soul in our family feels they know him at all and all are worried.
When the group is together he's the one trying too hard. Laughing too loud, seeming insincere, like a car salesman. At first we thought we intimidated him since ours is a tight, loud and boisterous group. This is literally all we know about him after a 9 month relationship. Would this make you nervous?
His name.
He is about the same age as our daughter.
He was an Eagle Scout.
He works selling some sort of health supplements.
We think he went to some college, but we're not sure
His Mom & Dad are divorced.
He likes his Stepdad.
He drives an Altima
He is not supposed to have an ex-wife or any kids. (And getting this particular piece of information took over 2 months to get)
His Mom is protective also and sat my daughter down at the very beginning of their relationship and more or less asked her "intentions". Sort of the same thing we are doing.
I told my son about it and swore him to secrecy so that I could get his take on it. He was so incensed about it that I'll have trouble keeping him from telling his other sister. I found out he doesn't trust the guy. He's been holding it in rather than ruin it for my daughter.
I seem to have the least reservations of anyone else in my family. Can all of us be that far off in our reactions to him?
Oy Vey!! I remember the easy days of parenting, colic, car wrecks, dating, being broke buying clothes. I thought it was supposed to get easier when they moved away.