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tigtog (aka Viv) is the founder of this blog. She lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves.

This author has written 3287 posts for Hoyden About Town. Read more about tigtog »

24 responses to ““I will…NOT””

  1. littoralmermaid

    tigtog – I’m relatively new to the idea of marriage (not abusive marriage, forced marriage, oppressively traditional marriage) as antifeminist, so I’m still trying to figure this out. Frankly some of the ideas in the thread struck me as a bit odd, but I’m not sure if that’s because they *are* odd, or because I’ve been so brainwashed by the patriarchy’s “marriage is the only way to be” conditioning that I can’t conceive of any other alternatives.
    I suggested upthread that for now, maybe it would be more acceptable for couples (either opposite sex or same sex) to be “partners” instead of “husband and wife”. And as for the diamond engagement ring, yeah, I see a lot of social/ethical issues with diamonds first off; plus the whole, “ooo! look at my rock!” drooling over diamond engagement rings makes me want to vomit.
    I can understand that for most of us, the legal/financial benefits of marriage (not sure if they’re as skewed in Australia as in the US, where the government actually spends millions of dollars promoting marriage) are probably too tempting for an opposite sex cohabiting couple to pass up.

  2. Madeline

    I’ve been thinking about this, since a friend of mine is getting (very, very traditionally) married this summer…

    For me, at least, one of the hardest things to reconcile has been my feminism and my irrational desire for the ring, the floofy white dress, the whole patriarchal shebang. The funny thing is, even if you’re aware that the statement doesn’t create true love, I think that for our culture it does make a commitment to remaining together that is really hard to duplicate outside the married state.

    I’m not trying to say that people who don’t get married can’t be committed to remaining together. I’m trying to say that, as a culture, we don’t have a category to put that relationship in and we don’t have a way to think about it very well. So in my mind, at least, marriage is associated with making a commitment, and I think I would find it very hard to intend to spend my life with someone who refused to get married.

    This is, incidentally, why I’ve always been an activist for gay marriage, not civil unions. Civil unions are great, but one of the ways gays are vilified is for “not having long-term relationships.” Culturally, being a gay person who is married is, I think, an important statement. People won’t react to a gay person in a civil union in the same way, won’t think of them as truly committed.

  3. littoralmermaid

    tigtog – Sorry to hear about your post-natal depression and lots of good wishes for the future.

    On a lighter note, I agree that the “wedding-industrial complex” is vomit-inducing.
    And seriously, wow, amazing deep thoughts on infatuation vs. love! (Are you a psychologist or in a related field?) I think that pop culture has really distorted our idea of love and made it seem more glamorous and easy than it really is. (Heh, not like I’d know a hell of a lot, I’m 20.) It’s presented infatuation as “love” at first sight as though it’s something magical; it packages infatuation and sexual attraction as romance and true love.

  4. Tracey

    You’ll have to forgive me for this, but I devoured so many feminist books before discovering the blogosphere that nearly every discussion reminds me of a book or three or five. And for some great feminist analysis of marriage I recommend:

    The Meaning of Wife by Anne Kingston – ALL about the insanity of the Wedding Industrial Complex and a little bit of depressing info about the history and origins of marriage

    I Do, But I Don’t by Kamy Wicoff – an almost memior-style book by a feminist women who is struggling to understand and reconcile the entire process of her wedding, from courtship to engagement to wedding planning to the actual big day. I have to warn you that it comes of as rather classist at times, since the author obviously comes from a family with means (she ends up going for the Vera Wang gown, after all), but her tone is genuine and her struggle makes for a really good read.

    The Bitch in the House: 26 women tell the truth about sex, solitude, work, motherhood, and marriage ed. Cathi Hanauer – a collection of essays that seem to echo the exact same sentiment of the commenters at IBTP. Tons of women who married their partners with visions of completely egalitarian marriages and were then in for rather rude awakenings. But I love personal stories, and I loved the book. I swear, the personal couldn’t be any more political than when it comes to marriage and motherhood.

  5. Lauredhel

    Getting married: for me, the one ritual aspect of the wedding ceremony I do like and believe has real social and personally transformative power is standing before kith and kin and announcing “I choose to be a family with this person”

    Mm. I wonder why this is (part of) why I’m not feeling any urge for a wedding ceremony? My partner and I stood up before family and friends celebrating our commitment to family at the naming of our son six weeks after his birth.

    We’ll probably have another party when we tie into a joint mortgage – with any luck, sometime in the next 12 months. Both these bonds seem to me to be at least as – if not more! – binding than a wedding ceremony.

    I think the last big rite of passage before our son’s naming, for him, was his PhD submission party; for me, perhaps my divorce party.

    Lots of different rituals, lots of different passages to have rites for. I’d love to hear those of other people.

  6. Meg Thornton

    My partner and I have been together for ten years now. We’re not married, we’re not planning to get married, and quite honestly, I wouldn’t want to marry him if I had the choice – mainly because we both have prejudices about what appropriate behaviour in a marriage should be. I don’t want to share a house with his father, and I’m damn certain he wouldn’t want to share a house with my mother. As it stands, we’ve purchased a house together, and both of our families accept us as being a permanent couple. Our friends do as well.

    I should note that we don’t have children, and we don’t plan on having any. If we *did* have children, I think we would have got married, simply because it’s a way of making the relationship between us legally recognised. I doubt I’d be having the froofawraw involved with a traditional wedding, if only because I made a decision many years ago that I wasn’t Christian.

  7. kate

    I’m not married, but we do have a baby and live together. In Australia the legal status between people like us and officially married people is pretty negligible, so we could still end up in the Family Court going halves on all our things and dividing our son should everything go pear-shaped (which doesn’t seem very likely at the moment).

    While I do see that there is a difference between ‘coupled’ and ‘married’ for some people, there isn’t for us. We do operate as individuals, but also as a team. When I’ve felt my sense of self being lost, it was more about the tiny baby latched onto my breasts, and stopping me from reading a good book. He’s currently getting upset that he still can’t crawl, this upsets him every day, he seems to think it will happen magically one morning. I’d better help him get unstuck.

  8. …is there something i’m missing? « Sara Speaking

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  9. kate

    Take two: baby in bed now.

    I wonder if people focussed on the princess wedding ideal believe that ‘marriage’ and ‘happily ever after’ will happen magically the way my son seems to think he will learn to crawl.

    I have no idea how to change the Western cultural idea of magical relationships (rather than pro-actively building them) but it’s gotta happen soon, or the other half of the marriages are going to fall apart too.

    Thanks for talking about your mental health tigtog, and the impact of your health on your relationship and your partner, it’s a big issue for me and some other people I know too. Un-diagnosed mental health problems caused major problems for my friends for many years, they’re both getting treatment and counselling now, re-building their relationship, and finding new ways to operate in the world. But it’s really hard work, and it’s too early to tell if they got help soon enough to save the relationship.

    My friend burst into tears describing their relationship a couple of months ago. The exhaustion of every day things, of caring for her husband when he’s ill, of being responsible for everything, because he can’t be, while coping with her own illness and stressors. This is why they have vows. It’s what she couldn’t possibly comprehend when she took those vows. That’s what people need to hear about before they promise to love forever – about the ‘worse’ and ‘in sickness’, and how bad they can be.

    I think weddings need to be preceeded by some real pre-marriage counselling, getting people to think properly about how they deal with conflict, how they communicate, and how they anticipate life changing over time. My friends were sent to ‘counselling’ by the church who married them. The ‘counsellors’ were a married couple who told them to pray together. That advice has been completely useless.

  10. Jennifer

    I married for tax reasons (we were about to move to the UK, and at the time, a man got about 1,000 pounds extra tax back for being married, which seemed a lot of money at the time).

    But I think we probably would have ended up married anyway. I did refuse an engagement ring, also – I don’t know many other people who have done that. We bought a painting together, instead (roughly spending that 1,000 pounds, strangely enough).

    But marriage (in the big white wedding sense) seems to be becoming more, not less, fashionable – the feminist corner of the blogosphere seems to be swimming against the tide, if anything.

  11. Meg Thornton

    Kate, I found your comments regarding mental health issues a good example of the whole situation with a partnership working or not working. My partner and I have gone through some problems of our own (I have chronic depression, and have had it since I was about fourteen… I’ve been under treatment for it now for about six years) due to my mental health issues. In a lot of ways, he’s been a great deal of help for me, partially because he’s been there when I’ve been at my worst, giving me another reason to resist the pitch of the salesdemon for suicide I had living in my head. The other way he’s helped me is by being something of a reality check for me. He was the one who first got me speaking to a doctor about my mental health issues (about four months into the relationship), which resulted in the diagnosis of an ongoing problem with hypothyroidism. He’s the one who’s pointed out to me when I was going off the rails, and who’s held me and showed me that I’m not totally worthless.

    He’s shown this commitment, stuck by me for ten years through the worst I could be. He’s lived with me when I’ve been furious with the rest of the universe, including him. He’s loved me all that time, and he didn’t have to. At that point, what do we need a ceremony for?

    In the words of one of my favourite characters (Kerr Avon, from Blake’s 7) “I have never understood why it was necessary to become irrational in order to prove that you care, or indeed, why it should be necessary to prove it at all.” My partner has proved he cares, in countless ways over the last ten years – I don’t need a ceremony as “proof”.

  12. blue milk

    I am really enjoying the discussion here. I have to admit I felt curiously alienated by (although also very stimulated) the discussions on “i blame the patriarchy” and “feministe” on this topic. The first I found a bit tight and the second I found a bit loose in viewpoints.

    I’m in a long-term relationship, one that I hope will last forever (so much so that we have a child together) but we are unlikely to ever marry and we don’t even have any joint bank accounts. I relate to Lauredhel’s experience of a naming ceremony for your baby replacing much of what you might be looking for in a wedding -that notion of a public declaration of your future together. It certainly did for us.

    I wrote about our decision not to marry here, at the end I list 10 reasons why we never got married so I won’t reiterate it all here but it is satisfying to read other feminists discuss their experiences and choices on this issue in this post.
    http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2007/02/12/we-never-got-married/

    Thanks.

  13. Rebekka

    While I’m not fussed about marriage one way or the other (and spent my childhood dreaming of owning heaps and heaps of horses, rather than getting married in a fluffy white dress), there were two things here I had to comment on.

    One was this:
    “plus the whole, “ooo! look at my rock!” drooling over diamond engagement rings makes me want to vomit.”

    But diamonds are pretty! I don’t want or need one from my partner, as I have a gorgeous one my aunt gave me that I wear every day, but they’re about the prettiest thing I’ve ever seen. They sparkle and make rainbows in the light! I can’t see why people admiring a diamond would make someone want to vomit, any more than admiring a pretty butterfly, or a flower, or the moon or a beautiful child would make someone want to vomit.

    Oh, and mine’s very much antique, has been in my family for several generations, so not worried about the whole diamond mining thing.

    The other was this:
    “but we are unlikely to ever marry and we don’t even have any joint bank accounts”

    Getting married doesn’t mean you have to have joint bank accounts! My parents have been married 33 years and still have separate finances.

  14. kate

    We have a joint bank account. Primarily because we have joint expenses – our son. At the moment the Bloke is going out to work, and I’m mostly at home with the baby. Because of the work/home situation, I’m primarily the shopper, and he’s the earner. So the idea is that a joint account is the easiest way for him to transfer ‘his’ earnings to ‘our’ expenses.

    Without leaving a cash allowance on the fridge, which would make me cry.

    My parents have always had ‘theirs’ and ‘hers’ accounts. I suppose my Dad’s TAB account counts as ‘his’.

  15. Lauredhel

    With internet banking so easy, my partner and I just transfer money back and forth as needed. We’ve both had our bank accounts/credit cards set up for ages, and have heaps of automatic payments and direct debits set up. Dismantling those systems would be a PITA, so we’d need a very good practical reason to do so, and we just don’t have one, so why bother?

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  17. kate

    We’re too forgetful to transfer the money, and we were setting up new bill payments anyway when we moved house. Of course, the nab, in all their wisdom, only sent me a card, so the joint account thing hasn’t been tested. He wont put money in until he has the wherewithall to get it out again. Which is perfectly ok with me.

  18. Penni

    Sorry, I wanted to weigh in on this issue too, and I’m going to do it here!
    I have to say I am a bit surprised at the idea of marriage (in and of itself, not talking about unhealthy relationships) being a feminist issue. To me of course you can be married and be a feminist. In fact the suggestion that you can’t seems that the pressure is coming from a quarter outside of the marriage, is coming from feminism itself. I’ve never been very comfortable with the idea of ‘feminism’ telling me what to do, think or say. What’s the good of it, if it’s just another set of conditions?
    In the house from which I write, love isn’t a feminist issue. (It is one in mass culture and popular media, but it isn’t one in the space between my partner and I). Marriage, although admittedly also a public state, usually begins in the emotional and private realm: love, sharing, usually co-habiting, sometimes parenting, it’s about entanglement. Marriage (the way we do it, which is sharing our finances, since they’ve never been very equal and neither of us wanted to live with this inequity) gives me a financial support structure – it also gives my husband one. He is able to study full time and share the care of our two daughters (his choice) because of my writing, I was able to write novels and care for our first daughter (my choice) when he worked. We’ve each made a space for the other to explore themselves.
    We have a piece of paper (granted it’s in Greek and could say anything, since neither of us read Greek, but it looks like a marriage certificate), and memories of a day we pledged to respect and love each other, to remain free-spirits but entangled together. That may or may not be what we actually said (neither of us can remember and there were no guests to tell us, though the words ‘free spirit’ were in there somewhere). But that was the heart of it.
    There are as many marriages as there are feminisms. To reduce either to a singularity is to deny the complexities of human experience, of the heart, of love. It’s to do the work for ‘them’, projecting the cold currency of romantic love as portrayed via Meg Ryan and perfume commercials onto real life, lived experience.
    I find myself wanting to apologise, explain, show how my marriage is different…meaning not threatening to feminists who disapprove of it. Isn’t it the same as trying to show how my feminism is different and therefore not threatening to men?

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