Early Engagement And Other Trends
June 4th, 2007 by Jeff Kee![]() | - Related Posts - |
Facebook has re-connected me with many old friends, or people I used to at least know in some way or another. And while I’m somehow finding all these clowns and adding them to my list, I found a very surprising thing. I was born in 1985, and I am 21 right now, turning 22 in October. My highschool grads are a year younger than me because I got a year behind in the midst of moving from Korea to Canada and what not. A lot of these kids are engaged already, at the age of 20, or even less.
I’m the single bachelor guy living in downtown Vancouver, pursuing my dreams as an entrepreneur of some sort, meddling in many different businesses spanning from web design, marketing, as well as foreign HR solutions for skilled labour etc. I’m very busy handling my business, as well as my health and other personal obligations with friends, and I still haven’t figured out myself yet at a truly spiritual level. They say people don’t know who they are exactly until the age of 25. I try to imagine myself engaged to somebody, and it gives me the chills, and it is such an uncomprehensible reality for me.
Another shocking thing about this is that, from what I observed, it’s mostly the Church-going type of Christians (not the spiritual, self-practising type of religious people, but the people who actually contain themselves more in the realms of going to structuralized church, attending youth groups etc.) that are getting engaged just like that. As much as I care for them and truly wish them happiness, I just cannot see how people have that mentality.
The truth is that it is a trade-off, and from an opportunity-cost perspective, it’s either a sell-out to be married that young, or it can simply lead to a shaky marriage. Maybe it’s hard to understand from my perspective. Getting a decent corporate job that pays $50,000 a year in salary, settling down, getting married, and putting money away into a pension plan is not my idea of life. I want to be more involved in the world, I want to try different businesses, make enough money to allow me to travel as I wish, and live a comfortable life without having to worry about how to make the next mortgage payment. I often worry that these friends of mine are simply settling for what they can get, at the whim and the temptations of romance lasting forever, and rushing into such situations. They seem to think that they need to “seal the deal” so to speak, and do it fast to make sure it lasts.
Oh, also, the no premarital sex part plays a huge role, I suspect. If your rules are to not have sex before marriage, well, unless you want to be a virgin til you’re 30, I guess you’ve got no other option but to get married now.
I see some of my friends living a fabulous happy life. They are 30+, living it up, living free, travelling, having fun, and developing their businesses hard. And then there are the people who are already tied down with the burden of marriage and the kids that follow with it, and not even half of them are perfectly happy.
I guess the 50% divorce rate in this country is speaking of the changes in life that people go through these days. The world is changing faster than ever, and young people are obviously very much likely to go through turbulent changes in life. I honestly cannot guarantee if I will still be living in Vancouver in a few years. You never know any of these things. What you want in life also changes. Your deepest philosophies can change, and your goals in life can change. In fact, they will change. As you grow up (and this never stops) you see the world differently each day or each year, and that pace of fast change does not slow down until later on in life.
It’s not that I wish misfortune upon my friends, nor see them as test rats, but I would very much like to keep an eye on them throughout the years and see what the survival rates are for these type of marriages. I’m very curious how they will turn out.







Yes, I’ve been tracking down old schoolfriends, and have been tracked down by others, through Facebook. It’s a fascinating tool; but, why do people use it so much? A few theories on my blog:
http://www.silversprite.com/?p=318
Hi Jeff!
Change is constant. Stick with your gut on this. You have some real food for thought and your points are valid in my opinion.
You will be successful keep “thinking” your way to what you want.
It’s all yours friend.
Steve
i see jeff aint too comfortable with the marriage idea…live it up dude….while you can. We shud hang out sometime..although i live in surrey and rarely make it out downtown!!
It’s not that i’m against marriage, I just dont’ want to be part of teh statistic of young crazy fools rushign into it and then realizing tehre are other things in life that you need to align yourself to.
I’m 35 and single. I can’t imagine getting married at 22 or even at 25. The reason is that I was a totally different person at 22 than I am now. At 25 I was totally different that me at 22 and a 180 from me at 35. Also, the number of women I meet in their 30’s who are divorced is crazy. Most of them say that they got married too young and didn’t know what they wanted.
That’s exactly my point and its great to see people who understand!
I don’t like meeting my old school friends over net, i prefer face to face meetings.
why are you thinking about 25? it sounds like you’re having a pre-quarter-life-crisis crisis. don’t worry about it. for me, i couldn’t imagine being engaged at 25 (which was 5 years ago). i can’t even imagine being engaged at 35. but if i meet that misfortune in 5 years
so be it… it’s all a matter of being happy in the now. and if you’re worried about missing out on anything, then just imagine what you’re missing out on and go do it. half of it probably won’t be as exciting as you think. then you’ll know once you’re in your relationship that you didn’t miss anything at all, and that you’re right where you should be.
A life-crisis is, in some ways, always happening. The world changes, people change, and we change… 25 is a statistic i read somewhere, although I find a lot of peopel who are over 30, living the fabulous single life and yet still not ready to “settle down” or “cash it in”.
The thing I find really stupid is when some girls say “I’m gonna get married at 2X.”
WHo the hell knows if you will find somebody right for you at that exact age? Who the hell is to guarantee the standard course of life?
You’re right, you never miss out on anything - it’s just a stream of life, and it’s a course that your life takes you through. No regrets.
i only have one female friend who has the “i have to be married by xx age” mentality. she’s very conservative, goes to church once or twice every weekend, and hasn’t dated very much. needless to say, i don’t fully see eye to eye with her. 99% of my friends are like me, and just want to have fun, hoping they’ll eventually run into someone cool to just date around. i wonder what the true ratio is these days of singles who have the “i have to be married…” syndrome…
If she’s hot, i’ll give it to her… then she’ll see a different world.
She’s not one of them “i wont have extra-marital sex” type of virgins, is she?
[…] Kee spoke about early engagements and the need to stay single to align yourself. What’s better these days? Single life in […]
hehe cool story Jeff !! Like it..
and damn you have a huge RSS button !
When marriage comes, you will be locked to one, only one.
It might depend on where you went to school. I graduated from a high school in East Vancouver in 2000 (I’m 24, 25 in October), and I’ve found about 40-some odd people from my grad class. Of these, I think only two or three are married/engaged.
My story is similar to yours, I suppose, except that I’m a few years older and I don’t have my own place yet. That and I do freelance writing whereas you do more visual and/or technical things. I haven’t looked into your bio, but considering that you’re in a business for yourself at 21, I’m assuming that you didn’t spend the 4-5 years at university like I did either. In retrospect, I probably could have gotten away with not getting the BA, but I have no regrets on that front.
I wrote a few posts on Facebook on my blog (just search for Facebook using the field near the top), including ways to exploit it in order to improve your RSS subscriber count. Might be worth checking out.
A couple of other things I neglected to mention in the other comment. You said that “people don’t know who they are exactly until the age of 25.” I disagree. I’m only a few months away from 25, but I don’t feel that I completely know who I am yet. I’ve established my identity as a freelance writer, but there is still a lot of room for growth and development. That and the fact that the average person changes careers… I believe the figure is seven times in a lifetime. I’d argue that many people *never* know exactly who they are.
You also write “I try to imagine myself engaged to somebody, and it gives me the chills, and it is such an uncomprehensible reality for me.” I’ve been with my high school sweetheart since senior year in high school. We are neither engaged nor married, but I could imagine that if we were more financially secure/prepared.
I graduated from high school in the 80s, not too long after you were born in fact.
Anyway, some of my classmates did marry early, but a majority of those I reconnected with married in their mid to late 30s. I have tons of friends who STILL have not married. These are attractive professionals with a bent on career and such.
I’m in a long term relationship, but I don’t think I get marry anytime soon and I’m turning 24 this december