proposal marriage is better than love marriage
When you found someone that you love all's perfect.
How the marriage will be in life depends on two people. To make the marriage life better, it is necessary for both of them to understand each other. Love marriage and Arrange marriage both are better.
not necessarily, sometimes proposal marriages involve love enough to work just aswell. Proposals often add more pressure onto a relationship though. But if theres a lot of love go for a proposal.
Well, unfortunately in these times, 50% of marriages end in divorce, regardless of how the people got married. I think it's better to have a love-based marriage because the people get to choose to get married. In Love Marriage you both have time to know each other before marriage.
Heck yea. Would you want to spend the rest of your life with someone you don't care about?
No. If your parents love is unhappy that should be your mirror that you will not make the mistake again. Make your marriage better than them. Besides that is your choice if you let your parents unhappy marriage affect you.
You will likely be significantly wealthier if you are married to a Broadway producer, but increased wealth will not make your life or marriage better. A good marriage is based on love and trust, and if you find that with a plumber, that is the far better marriage.
No. He lied to you about love. Sure, you can forgive him, but that won't fix what he did.
Her lais - verse narratives - illustrate a complex view of marriage, in which love, rules, passion, and sacrifice are all explored. The inference in her works are that love, when it is of a selfless and high quality, is better than a bad marriage, though love outside of the rules of marriage inevitably ends in pain and suffering.
nope, doubt it
Better Than Love was created on 2010-05-23.
A love marriage would be a marriage that two people have because they love each other. This is in comparison to an arranged marriage, which two people have at the instruction of their parents, or a marriage of convenience, which two people have because there is some purpose served by their marriage other than love, such as the union of two powerful or wealthy families.