You are very young and loved. Why do not you seal the deal? However, from wearing a white dress until marrying, with Captain Buzzkill and The Stat
If you are still young, be careful - it will be even more ugly. According to the National Center for Health Statistics, about 60% of couples between the ages of 20 and 25 are destined to divorce.
The majority of early marriage failures are largely due to the limited experience of emotional immature life. Science has also played a role
Elaine Spencer - Carver, a professor of social work at the University of Missouri in Kansas City, says:
Peg Donley, an official marriage therapist at Prairie Village in Kansas state, says: "The elderly may be more experienced and realistic."
Mr. Spencer Carver said, "If you talk to people who sent long-term marriage, you will be talking about their pleasures." "Young people accumulate positive memory and can not overcome difficulties. "
Even science is bad for you when you are in love with young. Tang Li condemns brain activity with a poor bond
"Female brain does not develop until 25 years old and male brain develops later between 25 and 30 years old," Tangley said. "I said to my children," You do not want to get married before your brain is fully developed. "
Endorphin is also a factor. "People under the age of 25 tend to think that marriage makes them happy," Tangley said. "When they are with this person they feel very good, that is how it lasts, according to statistics, married endorphins can only last three years."
"People getting married quickly often have unrealistic expectations about what they must offer for marriage," Donley says.
"We are all in romance," Spencer Carver says. "This often leads to a young marriage."
The dissolution rate of women living with future spouses before marriage is nearly 80% higher than the dissolution rate of women who are not married.
Source: National marriage project / Virginia University, National Health Statistics Center, Yale University, Columbia University - American sociological review
Nonprofit organization Too Young to Wed held its first International Girls Day on 11th October 2012. On the same day, VIPs from all around the world gathered in the United Nations in New York, surrounded by a picture of the bride of a 5 year old child, promised to make every effort to end the child's marriage. Mr. Stephanie Sinclair, a visual journalist in Afghanistan, is writing a story about the self-destruction of girls and women. There she found anxious patterns in scarred patients in hospital burn injuries: most of them forced to marry like children. Sinclair is understanding that child marriage is common in communities worldwide and promises to document this practice for the next ten years of life expecting to inspire change I will.
Her family grew up in a small village in eastern Rome in the 1920s and 1930s and has olive groves, vineyards and livestock. When his father passed away and suffered from pneumonia, her mother left two young girls and married an unknown person at the age of thirteen at the age of thirteen. Her husband is 26 years old. She did not go to him at once, but her childhood was virtually over by marriage. When she was fifteen she and her friends jumped rope in the plaza and grazed a goat on the mountain, he took a bath in a few weeks and came back to eat hot meals. She will see this unshaved person passing by and will know that this is her husband.