Shacking Up...To Do Or Hell To The Na'll!!!

Shacking Up

  • To Shack

    Votes: 17 50.0%
  • Hell To The Na'll

    Votes: 12 35.3%
  • I Really Don't Know...What Ya'll Think?

    Votes: 5 14.7%

  • Total voters
    34

Andeyhollawho

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
So what do you all think about this taboo question. :dunno:

I have always been in agreement with shacking up if you relationship is serious enough to where you may be thinking about marriage. I would even take it so far as to say all engaged people should shack for about six months prior to marriage. :yes:

With divorce rates through the roof I think this is the ultimate way "test" the commitment in a real life trial. There are a lot of things about a person that you just can't learn living apart from each other. Waiting to learn those things (expectations) can lead to an early divorce. What do ya'll think???
 
So what do you all think about this taboo question. :dunno:

I have always been in agreement with shacking up if you relationship is serious enough to where you may be thinking about marriage. I would even take it so far as to say all engaged people should shack for about six months prior to marriage. :yes:

With divorce rates through the roof I think this is the ultimate way "test" the commitment in a real life trial. There are a lot of things about a person that you just can't learn living apart from each other. Waiting to learn those things (expectations) can lead to an early divorce. What do ya'll think???


I tend to agree with you on this. I mean its not like most people wait to have intercourse before marriage nowadays anyways so why not take the extra step.

Its one thing to do your thing but if you intend to get to the point where you are going to marry a person then yes I think you should experience them on that more personal level. Living with someone is in itself a commitment.




Peace
 
I tend to agree with you on this. I mean its not like most people wait to have intercourse before marriage nowadays anyways so why not take the extra step.

Its one thing to do your thing but if you intend to get to the point where you are going to marry a person then yes I think you should experience them on that more personal level. Living with someone is in itself a commitment.




Peace


Hell To The Na'll

Why . . . I'll tell you why. It's REAL simple.

I'm a man, with no ring, I can't tell you what to do LS.

:hmm:


All that late night partying, going out with your promiscuous friends!! Driving fast!



No seriously. I've done it before, I would not do it again. Because I want things in my house to be one way. But if I have not ringed the woman . . . . :hmm:
 
Hell To The Na'll

Why . . . I'll tell you why. It's REAL simple.

I'm a man, with no ring, I can't tell you what to do LS.

:hmm:


All that late night partying, going out with your promiscuous friends!! Driving fast!



No seriously. I've done it before, I would not do it again. Because I want things in my house to be one way. But if I have not ringed the woman . . . . :hmm:

That's kind of my point though Shane. :smh:

Both are probably used to doing things a certain way and you have to compromise a little on those things to make a marriage work. If you can't work it out without a ring, when you get that ring on her finger and she is not meeting your "expectations" what do you do then?

Argue at her, cuss her, tell her she is not doing shit right? What do you mean you don't want to cook everynight? What do you mean you don't do dishes? Vacuum? What do you mean my money is your money? Why didn't you pay the gas bill? What do you mean why didn't I pay the gas bill? You...you...get your ass out of here! :smh:

And thus begins the road toward yet another divorce. :smh:
 
Well, I dig where your coming from. But here is the thing.

Marriage is an institution. One of the ultimate commitments that can be made, and it has an UNDERSTANDING that is associated with it.

Living together, you do not HAVE to compromise.

With marriage, you are contracted to, by BOTH of you making it a commitment to do so.

That's kind of my point though Shane. :smh:

Both are probably used to doing things a certain way and you have to compromise a little on those things to make a marriage work. If you can't work it out without a ring, when you get that ring on her finger and she is not meeting your "expectations" what do you do then?

Argue at her, cuss her, tell her she is not doing shit right? What do you mean you don't want to cook everynight? What do you mean you don't do dishes? Vacuum? What do you mean my money is your money? Why didn't you pay the gas bill? What do you mean why didn't I pay the gas bill? You...you...get your ass out of here! :smh:

And thus begins the road toward yet another divorce. :smh:
 
I say YES to shacking.

Learned first hand you can love someone to death, but doesn't mean you can live with them :smh:
 
it just doesnt make sense to me

people claim to live together to see if they could get married...

and thats happening more than it ever has

yet...the divorce rate is out the roof

personally i can compromise with living with my fiance...but not living with a boyfriend...im not a fan of giving out keys either:hmm:
 
I'm all for shacking up. You get to know a lot about a person living in close quarters. In fact, that scenario could give you all the information you need if you're considering a marriage or even a really serious relationship without marriage.
 
I'm not for it. It falls under that "why buy a cow when you can get the milk for free" saying. If you're a woman expecting a man to commit to you and get you that ring, you're gonna be waiting a while before that happens if ya'll live together, from what I've seen. If we have no plans to get married, and marriage is what I want, we're not living together, plain and simple. I don't need to play house with some dude, and having him living with me doesn't mean he's gonna be any more faithful as opposed to him living on his own.
 
it just doesnt make sense to me

people claim to live together to see if they could get married...

and thats happening more than it ever has

yet...the divorce rate is out the roof

personally i can compromise with living with my fiance...but not living with a boyfriend...im not a fan of giving out keys either:hmm:

I'm not for it. It falls under that "why buy a cow when you can get the milk for free" saying. If you're a woman expecting a man to commit to you and get you that ring, you're gonna be waiting a while before that happens if ya'll live together, from what I've seen. If we have no plans to get married, and marriage is what I want, we're not living together, plain and simple. I don't need to play house with some dude, and having him living with me doesn't mean he's gonna be any more faithful as opposed to him living on his own.

I'm more so speaking of "committed" people. I see this is taking a turn for the worse so let me reiterate that point.

If you feel you are marriage potential. Maybe you have a date planned and you are planning a wedding...Isn't it just as important to "plan" the life after the wedding? :dunno:

I'm not saying you meet a guy and move in with him next month. :smh:
 
I say if you're serious and see the relationship progressing then do it. Boyfriend or fiance. How can you honestly accept a proposal if you don't know if you can live with him anyway...
 
Well, I dig where your coming from. But here is the thing.

Marriage is an institution. One of the ultimate commitments that can be made, and it has an UNDERSTANDING that is associated with it.

Living together, you do not HAVE to compromise.

With marriage, you are contracted to, by BOTH of you making it a commitment to do so.

But don't you think that "contract" is what is fucking up most marriages though. People come in like OK you are my husband so you are supposed to do this or you are my wife you are supposed to...

Let me make this point really clear...Marriage is nothing but a piece of paper. :smh: Commitment is the real contract. If you are no good without that piece of paper you are no good with it! :smh:

This is why I say shack. Learn that person who you are committing yourself to a little.
 
I'm more so speaking of "committed" people. I see this is taking a turn for the worse so let me reiterate that point.

If you feel you are marriage potential. Maybe you have a date planned and you are planning a wedding...Isn't it just as important to "plan" the life after the wedding? :dunno:

I'm not saying you meet a guy and move in with him next month. :smh:

Now that's a little different. If we both are for marriage, the date is set and plans are in motion, then I'm for it. That gives you a little time to adjust to the person that you intend on marrying.
 
I've seen it from both sides, where it ultimately ends in turmoil or ends in a lasting marriage. I personally think it depends on the two people involved: I think it may be helpful for both parties to see how the other "lives" and maintains their lifestyle, at home. However, if you've been dating for a while and understand each other, you'll pick up on those things without shacking up with them, I feel...

But, shacking up will also help answer those tough questions about finances, etc. if marriage is considered in the long run...:yes:
 
I'm not for it. It falls under that "why buy a cow when you can get the milk for free" saying. If you're a woman expecting a man to commit to you and get you that ring, you're gonna be waiting a while before that happens if ya'll live together, from what I've seen. If we have no plans to get married, and marriage is what I want, we're not living together, plain and simple. I don't need to play house with some dude, and having him living with me doesn't mean he's gonna be any more faithful as opposed to him living on his own.

Thats a very regressive attitude. And here I'm thinking you are a modern thinking woman who would rather live together forever than get married.
 
I'm more so speaking of "committed" people. I see this is taking a turn for the worse so let me reiterate that point.

If you feel you are marriage potential. Maybe you have a date planned and you are planning a wedding...Isn't it just as important to "plan" the life after the wedding?
:dunno:

I'm not saying you meet a guy and move in with him next month. :smh:

yup

I say YES to shacking.

Learned first hand you can love someone to death, but doesn't mean you can live with them :smh:
Izzy you know the deal sis :yes:

Hell To The Na'll

Why . . . I'll tell you why. It's REAL simple.

I'm a man, with no ring, I can't tell you what to do LS.

:hmm:


All that late night partying, going out with your promiscuous friends!! Driving fast!



No seriously. I've done it before, I would not do it again. Because I want things in my house to be one way. But if I have not ringed the woman . . . . :hmm:

hmmm wonders why you be calling my name :cool: lol

I respect your own reality Mr 1978. Every one has differing experiences. No doubt. And who told you I drove fast :cool:
 
For all of the sexual sophistication on this board, it's apparent that many of you have one hell of a lot to learn about how men and women exist between bouts of fucking. :lol:

You can shack for 99,000 years and still not have a clue about what life will be like with that person after both of you have made an absolute, irreversible (you can get a divorce, but marriage leaves a permanent mark on your life in a way 100 boyfriends or girlfriends cannot). I have seen folks shack up and stay married for 20 years. I have also seen many couples shack up for 5 years, get married, and divroce within a year. I'm not looking at it from a moral point of view. Marriage is a special circumstance that just can't be replicated without, well, being married.

See, what you can't replicate is how someone will handle being absolutely fucking sick of you. Not bored with you. Not annoyed at your corny jokes. But 100 percent, if you grind your teeth like that one more fucking time I am going to kick your ass sick of you. That's marriage. Shacking is child's play compared to that. I have tried both, and with shacking, when I got tired I just stepped. Marriage entails layers of financial, social and other bullshit that you just can't say "see ya" to.
 
So what do you all think about this taboo question. :dunno:

I have always been in agreement with shacking up if you relationship is serious enough to where you may be thinking about marriage. I would even take it so far as to say all engaged people should shack for about six months prior to marriage. :yes:

With divorce rates through the roof I think this is the ultimate way "test" the commitment in a real life trial. There are a lot of things about a person that you just can't learn living apart from each other. Waiting to learn those things (expectations) can lead to an early divorce. What do ya'll think???

Damn playa. You stole my thunder. I guess i should've just said cosign
 
For all of the sexual sophistication on this board, it's apparent that many of you have one hell of a lot to learn about how men and women exist between bouts of fucking. :lol:

You can shack for 99,000 years and still not have a clue about what life will be like with that person after both of you have made an absolute, irreversible (you can get a divorce, but marriage leaves a permanent mark on your life in a way 100 boyfriends or girlfriends cannot). I have seen folks shack up and stay married for 20 years. I have also seen many couples shack up for 5 years, get married, and divroce within a year. I'm not looking at it from a moral point of view. Marriage is a special circumstance that just can't be replicated without, well, being married.

See, what you can't replicate is how someone will handle being absolutely fucking sick of you. Not bored with you. Not annoyed at your corny jokes. But 100 percent, if you grind your teeth like that one more fucking time I am going to kick your ass sick of you. That's marriage. Shacking is child's play compared to that. I have tried both, and with shacking, when I got tired I just stepped. Marriage entails layers of financial, social and other bullshit that you just can't say "see ya" to.

That's exactly the point. How would you possibly know that a person grinds their teeth to the point you want to pull every tooth out of their head unless you live with them? You MAY not know a person after living with them. However, you DEFINITELY won't know a person unless you do. it has nothing to do with that bullshit about not buying the cow if you've already had the milk. If you're talking about trying to put in some serious time in the relationship, you have to know that person. The only way to truly know someone is to live with them. It's exactly as you said, when you lived with a person and the shit got to thick, you bounced. You'd do the same thing if you were married to them. The only difference is if you married them you have the unenviable task of going through a divorce.

Disclaimer: I wrote this before I saw Sinamindelite's post. I wasn't referring to your post when I said what I said about the cow and the milk thing.
 
Don't you mean "shaking up"???

:lol:

I've seen it from both sides, where it ultimately ends in turmoil or ends in a lasting marriage. I personally think it depends on the two people involved: I think it may be helpful for both parties to see how the other "lives" and maintains their lifestyle, at home. However, if you've been dating for a while and understand each other, you'll pick up on those things without shacking up with them, I feel...

But, shacking up will also help answer those tough questions about finances, etc. if marriage is considered in the long run...:yes:

I agree with you on this.

How successful "shacking" will be I think all depends on the couple. I thought for a long time that it would be a bad idea because what happens if the relationship comes to end. It becomes a bad situation. But when I think about it now, if you're headed for a breakup it will come sooner or later regardless of the living situation.
 
Well, I dig where your coming from. But here is the thing.

Marriage is an institution. One of the ultimate commitments that can be made, and it has an UNDERSTANDING that is associated with it.

Living together, you do not HAVE to compromise.

With marriage, you are contracted to, by BOTH of you making it a commitment to do so.

if you don't , then you're simply roomates. I may be accused of over simplifying here but, here goes. marriage is in the heart. A ring and a piece of paper shouldn't change how you feel about a person. if you're committed to a person, you're committed to them no matter. Do you love a person any more after you say "I do" then you did the night before? if you don't compromise living together then you simply are two people living under the same roof. You're not living together. You're co-existing. A person's habits won't change simply because you sign a piece of paper. if their a slob before you get married, they'll be a slob afterwards. If they can't handle their finances before, they won't be able to after. if you live together, you manage that household together. If not, you're simply fuck buddies, or roomates.
 
:lol:



I agree with you on this.

How successful "shacking" will be I think all depends on the couple. I thought for a long time that it would be a bad idea because what happens if the relationship comes to end. It becomes a bad situation. But when I think about it now, if you're headed for a breakup it will come sooner or later regardless of the living situation.

Bingo!! couldn't have said it better myself.
 
For all of the sexual sophistication on this board, it's apparent that many of you have one hell of a lot to learn about how men and women exist between bouts of fucking. :lol:

You can shack for 99,000 years and still not have a clue about what life will be like with that person after both of you have made an absolute, irreversible (you can get a divorce, but marriage leaves a permanent mark on your life in a way 100 boyfriends or girlfriends cannot). I have seen folks shack up and stay married for 20 years. I have also seen many couples shack up for 5 years, get married, and divroce within a year. I'm not looking at it from a moral point of view. Marriage is a special circumstance that just can't be replicated without, well, being married.

See, what you can't replicate is how someone will handle being absolutely fucking sick of you. Not bored with you. Not annoyed at your corny jokes. But 100 percent, if you grind your teeth like that one more fucking time I am going to kick your ass sick of you. That's marriage. Shacking is child's play compared to that. I have tried both, and with shacking, when I got tired I just stepped. Marriage entails layers of financial, social and other bullshit that you just can't say "see ya" to.


You know your post didn't really make marriage seem like anything it's cracked up to be.

I say live with them once you have decided to commit. The work out your kinks before getting married.

I was married. I know what it's like to be so sick of someone you could kill their ass but you would have to pay the bills by yourself. :lol:

I think that piece of paper is fucking useless. Some bullshit dream that someone told your parents, who told you, was the "right" thing to do.

Fuck that.
 
I'm not for it. It falls under that "why buy a cow when you can get the milk for free" saying. If you're a woman expecting a man to commit to you and get you that ring, you're gonna be waiting a while before that happens if ya'll live together, from what I've seen. If we have no plans to get married, and marriage is what I want, we're not living together, plain and simple. I don't need to play house with some dude, and having him living with me doesn't mean he's gonna be any more faithful as opposed to him living on his own.

He's fucking you already. You go any further in reverse and you would be buying the milk from him.:smh:

This statement is pure rubbish, but you're okay with me.
 
Thats a very regressive attitude. And here I'm thinking you are a modern thinking woman who would rather live together forever than get married.

Oh, no. The thought of marriage makes me :puke:. I only say that because I have a lot of female friends who are after that ring and that title. That is how they feel about the situation. Same goes for your comment Shadow.
 
During one of our seminars, a woman asked a common question. She said, How do I know if I married the right person?

I noticed that there was a large man sitting next to her so I said, It depends. Is that your husband?; In all seriousness, she answered ;How do you know?



Let me answer this question because the chances are good that it's weighing on your mind.



Here's the answer.

EVERY relationship has a cycle. In the beginning, you fell in love with your spouse. You anticipated their call, wanted their touch, and liked their idiosyncrasies.



Falling in love with your spouse wasn't hard. In fact, it was a completely natural and spontaneous experience. You didn't have to DO anything. That's why it's called ;falling ; in love... Because it's happening TO YOU.



People in love sometimes say,I was swept of my feet. Think about the imagery of that __expression. It implies that you were just standing there; doing nothing, and then something came along and happened TO YOU.



Falling in love is easy. It's a passive and spontaneous experience. But after a few years of marriage, the euphoria of love fades. It's the natural cycle of EVERY relationship. Slowly but surely, phone calls become a bother (if they come at all), touch is not always welcome (when it happens), and your spouse's idiosyncrasies, instead of being cute, drive you nuts.



The symptoms of this stage vary with every relationship, but if you think about your marriage, you will notice a dramatic difference between the initial stage when you were in love and a much duller or even angry subsequent stage.



At this point, you and/or your spouse might start asking, Did I marry the right person? And as you and your spouse reflect on the euphoria of the love you once had, you may begin to desire that experience with someone else. This is when marriages breakdown. People blame their spouse for their unhappiness and look outside their marriage for fulfillment.



Extramarital fulfillment comes in all shapes and sizes. Infidelity is the most obvious. But sometimes people turn to work,a hobby, a friendship, excessive TV, or abusive substances.



But the answer to this dilemma does NOT lie outside your marriage. It lies within it. I'm not saying that you couldn't fall in love with someone else. You could.



And TEMPORARILY you'd feel better. But you'd be in the same situation a few years later. Because (listen carefully to this):



THE KEY TO SUCCEEDING IN MARRIAGE IS NOT FINDING THE RIGHT PERSON; IT'S LEARNING TO LOVE THE PERSON YOU FOUND.



SUSTAINING love is not a passive or spontaneous experience. It'll NEVER just happen to you. You can't find LASTING love. You have to make it day in and day out. That's why we have the __expression 'THE LABOUR OF LOVE '. Because it takes time, effort, and energy . And most importantly, it takes WISDOM . You have to know WHAT TO DO to make your marriage work.



Make no mistake about it. Love is NOT a mystery. There are specific things you can do (with or without your spouse) to succeed with your marriage.



Just as there are physical laws of the universe (such as gravity), there are also laws for relationships. Just as the right diet and exercise program makes you physically stronger, certain habits in your relationship WILL make your marriage stronger. It's a direct cause and effect. If you know and apply the laws, the results are predictable. ..you can make love.



Love in marriage is indeed a decision.. . Not just a feeling
 
During one of our seminars, a woman asked a common question. She said, How do I know if I married the right person?

I noticed that there was a large man sitting next to her so I said, It depends. Is that your husband?; In all seriousness, she answered ;How do you know?



Let me answer this question because the chances are good that it's weighing on your mind.



Here's the answer.

EVERY relationship has a cycle. In the beginning, you fell in love with your spouse. You anticipated their call, wanted their touch, and liked their idiosyncrasies.



Falling in love with your spouse wasn't hard. In fact, it was a completely natural and spontaneous experience. You didn't have to DO anything. That's why it's called ;falling ; in love... Because it's happening TO YOU.



People in love sometimes say,I was swept of my feet. Think about the imagery of that __expression. It implies that you were just standing there; doing nothing, and then something came along and happened TO YOU.



Falling in love is easy. It's a passive and spontaneous experience. But after a few years of marriage, the euphoria of love fades. It's the natural cycle of EVERY relationship. Slowly but surely, phone calls become a bother (if they come at all), touch is not always welcome (when it happens), and your spouse's idiosyncrasies, instead of being cute, drive you nuts.



The symptoms of this stage vary with every relationship, but if you think about your marriage, you will notice a dramatic difference between the initial stage when you were in love and a much duller or even angry subsequent stage.



At this point, you and/or your spouse might start asking, Did I marry the right person? And as you and your spouse reflect on the euphoria of the love you once had, you may begin to desire that experience with someone else. This is when marriages breakdown. People blame their spouse for their unhappiness and look outside their marriage for fulfillment.



Extramarital fulfillment comes in all shapes and sizes. Infidelity is the most obvious. But sometimes people turn to work,a hobby, a friendship, excessive TV, or abusive substances.



But the answer to this dilemma does NOT lie outside your marriage. It lies within it. I'm not saying that you couldn't fall in love with someone else. You could.



And TEMPORARILY you'd feel better. But you'd be in the same situation a few years later. Because (listen carefully to this):



THE KEY TO SUCCEEDING IN MARRIAGE IS NOT FINDING THE RIGHT PERSON; IT'S LEARNING TO LOVE THE PERSON YOU FOUND.



SUSTAINING love is not a passive or spontaneous experience. It'll NEVER just happen to you. You can't find LASTING love. You have to make it day in and day out. That's why we have the __expression 'THE LABOUR OF LOVE '. Because it takes time, effort, and energy . And most importantly, it takes WISDOM . You have to know WHAT TO DO to make your marriage work.



Make no mistake about it. Love is NOT a mystery. There are specific things you can do (with or without your spouse) to succeed with your marriage.



Just as there are physical laws of the universe (such as gravity), there are also laws for relationships. Just as the right diet and exercise program makes you physically stronger, certain habits in your relationship WILL make your marriage stronger. It's a direct cause and effect. If you know and apply the laws, the results are predictable. ..you can make love.



Love in marriage is indeed a decision.. . Not just a feeling

This is what I mean. I'm not saying don't shack up, I'm just saying it's never going to tell you whether or not you should be married to that person. As a matter of fact, just because your lifestyles are compatible (you like the same toothpaste and she doesn't snore, etc) you may be lulled into a false sense of security. Marriage is committment- absolute and total. There is no practice for that. No trial run. No approximation. Go ahead and live together and tell yourself you are really getting information that will help you know if you should be married to that person. You are not. Marriage is for adults only, kids need not apply.
 
If you shack, you find out the truth. You discover what you have been hiding from yourself and you discover what she has been hiding from you. You both will grow from the experience, but you grow in different directions and at different speeds......It's almost a right to passage........be careful family. It almost always spells disaster.....
 
18 years married. Lived with my wife for 4 weeks before our marriage. We didn't shack up until there was little room to back up. I knew her. I respected her. I appreciated her.

I reflect on these thing each time we bump heads. No one before her or since her, can outshine her.

I trust that she got me in everyway. We fight, but we fight like people in love. We never war. We never crush each other.

We both cherish this IT thing in our relationship. We have both reaffirmed a daily pledge not to cross our It thing. We have spent 18 years never crossing IT. This It thing fuels her support and it still motivates me. It makes me fearless and horny. It makes me think about home when some random chick flirts. It makes me think about home everything I do.

Our It thing allows her to sit next to me as I visit BGOL.

For me shacking up in like going to the local community college with a get-by job. Marriage is like going to that 4 year university with a career prospect. The commitment, rewards and experience is just so much more of everything.

I got me a Michelle Obama. I am not one of these anti marriage cats. I realize marriage ain't for everyone. Still, many of us are :dance: thru life with a :yes:.

Black love is real for us.
 
18 years married. Lived with my wife for 4 weeks before our marriage. We didn't shack up until there was little room to back up. I knew her. I respected her. I appreciated her.

I reflect on these thing each time we bump heads. No one before her or since her, can outshine her.

I trust that she got me in everyway. We fight, but we fight like people in love. We never war. We never crush each other.

We both cherish this IT thing in our relationship. We have both reaffirmed a daily pledge not to cross our It thing. We have spent 18 years never crossing IT. This It thing fuels her support and it still motivates me. It makes me fearless and horny. It makes me think about home when some random chick flirts. It makes me think about home everything I do.

Our It thing allows her to sit next to me as I visit BGOL.

For me shacking up in like going to the local community college with a get-by job. Marriage is like going to that 4 year university with a career prospect. The commitment, rewards and experience is just so much more of everything.

I got me a Michelle Obama. I am not one of these anti marriage cats. I realize marriage ain't for everyone. Still, many of us are :dance: thru life with a :yes:.

Black love is real for us.


That's it. This thread should end right here. Well said, bruh.
 
18 years married. Lived with my wife for 4 weeks before our marriage. We didn't shack up until there was little room to back up. I knew her. I respected her. I appreciated her.

I reflect on these thing each time we bump heads. No one before her or since her, can outshine her.

I trust that she got me in everyway. We fight, but we fight like people in love. We never war. We never crush each other.

We both cherish this IT thing in our relationship. We have both reaffirmed a daily pledge not to cross our It thing. We have spent 18 years never crossing IT. This It thing fuels her support and it still motivates me. It makes me fearless and horny. It makes me think about home when some random chick flirts. It makes me think about home everything I do.

Our It thing allows her to sit next to me as I visit BGOL.

For me shacking up in like going to the local community college with a get-by job. Marriage is like going to that 4 year university with a career prospect. The commitment, rewards and experience is just so much more of everything.

I got me a Michelle Obama. I am not one of these anti marriage cats. I realize marriage ain't for everyone. Still, many of us are :dance: thru life with a :yes:.

Black love is real for us.


awwww :yes::D

and there's hope!
 
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