Czarcasm wrote: » That's it like, I mean, people should surely have some idea long before any talk of marriage whether their boyfriend or girlfriend or future in-laws think that way or not. I mean, it's not like the idea should really come as a surprise to anyone? I think Adamantium means that if anyone takes offence or thinks that much less of their boyfriend for this, then they shouldn't get married anyway. It's not like this is the biggest issue their relationship will ever face. It helps to keep a sense of perspective on these things.
Tarzana wrote: » I can't understand how anyone can grow up like that in Ireland if born later than the '70s.
Shenshen wrote: » if he had actually gone and asked him it would make me question how well he actually does know me.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » No, I was born in the 60s, and some of my brothers in the 50s. This stuff sounds more like my Dad, born in the 1920s. He was a stone cold racist, too.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » No, I was born in the 60s, and some of my brothers in the 50s. This stuff sounds more like my Dad, born in the 1920s.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Then when you say you were asking him so you were not imposed on the whole family - it sounds pretty superfluous.
Because from the perspective of the family - you already knew their feelings on it. Even had he refused - you would not have felt you were imposing yourself on the family after all - because you knew what they felt.
I mean in general - not specific to your case. Generally the tradition is to ask the father of the bride. Why does the tradition - generally - not go both ways if the tradition is based on the kinds of concepts you described? In the light of _that_ the idea that it is to ask for permission to become part of a family unit - seems to make no sense as why do we ask permission of one family, but not the other. Especially when - as you describe - you would have called off the wedding in the light of her familys refusal but you proceeded with it regardless of your own families one.
The father has no such "authority" either. At all.
Czarcasm wrote: » I'd say the same for anyone's reaction that compared modern thinking about the idea of the boyfriend asking for his girlfriends' father's permission/approval to marry his daughter, comparing that to slave ownership or the perception of women in society decades ago would want to go away and get some perspective.
Dial Hard wrote: » That's incredibly patronising to the women who genuinely feel like this tradition does have that connotation of ownership, Czarcasm. I, and I suspect most of the women posting on this thread have led an incredibly privileged life in comparison to millions of women the world over. I'm well aware of that. But if anyone on this thread actually thinks that, even in Ireland, we're all that far removed from a time when women were essentially chattel, then they're either incredibly naïve or being deliberately obtuse.That's why the idea of asking the bride's father for permission ( or approval, or his blessing - whatever way you want to pretty it up) grinds so much with some of us - we're literally only a generation or two removed from when a woman could do very little without her father or husband's permission. So for me, personally, this "tradition" hasn't yet attained the necessary distance (or perspective, if you prefer) for it to be seen as little more than a harmless anachronism.
Adalyn Scrawny Goalkeeper wrote: » What exactly "sounds like someone born in the 1920's".
Zubeneschamali wrote: » Asking the father for permission to marry his daughter before proposing. As phrased in the OP:Girls, do you want your OH to ask your dad before you? And you said:It's the right thing to do and I would ask myself without doubt. I would find it a bit disrespectful not to as its a long standing tradition. That sounds to me like something a guy in my Dad's generation would say, and something which would get you dumped by a lot of women born in the 60s or later, who would suddenly realize you are a fossil.
Czarcasm wrote: » If I had known her father would never accept nor approve of me as his son in law, as a suitable husband for his daughter, then I would probably have suggested that our relationship wasn't going to work out and was untenable from that point on.
Barely There wrote: » Why? - you're not marrying her father. Does your fiancee's opinion come into it in this scenario at all? And if you're wife shared your attitude then you wouldn't be married I presume?
Dial Hard wrote: » That's why the idea of asking the bride's father for permission ( or approval, or his blessing - whatever way you want to pretty it up) grinds so much with some of us - we're literally only a generation or two removed from when a woman could do very little without her father or husband's permission. So for me, personally, this "tradition" hasn't yet attained the necessary distance (or perspective, if you prefer) for it to be seen as little more than a harmless anachronism.
Sitting at the back of the bus didn't do black people any material harm, but we understand why it's not the done thing anymore.
osarusan wrote: » Yet there are a fair number of female posters on here who've said they don't think it's disrespectful at all, and even a small number who actually like the idea.
osarusan wrote: » But, with the amount of legitimate criticism that can be made, going on about how it implies ownership in some way is a complete red herring, and there's no reason to be making that argument.
Dial Hard wrote: » How is it a red herring? The entire tradition is directly borne of the notion of ownership.
Adalyn Scrawny Goalkeeper wrote: » Most people couldn't care less, but its seriously annoying you for some reason.
Dial Hard wrote: » The entire tradition is directly borne of the notion of ownership.
Barely There wrote: » Why? - you're not marrying her father.
Does your fiancee's opinion come into it in this scenario at all?
And if you're wife shared your attitude then you wouldn't be married I presume?
osarusan wrote: » So it's a red herring to argue that, in 2014, those guys who would like to ask the father for a blessing/permission are doing so because of some notion of ownership.
Dial Hard wrote: » I don't think it's a red herring to examine where such traditions come from and explore the reasons why people continue them, is all.
osarusan wrote: » If it has that connotation for some females, fair enough. But it's not fair to imply it has that connotation for the men also.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » ... and who cares what some foolish female might think, when this is a manly tradition for what men do man-to-man when organizing the females lives for them, bless their cotton socks.
Czarcasm wrote: » It sounds superfluous to you tax because of the way we think differently.
Czarcasm wrote: » According to you, who has no authority over me to tell me whether he does, or he doesn't. We just don't, and most likely never will, think the same way about these matters.
Czarcasm wrote: » Of course it does, and it did, she thought it was unusual, but as I said already, the only reason she thought it was unusual was because it seemed so conventional with regard to my more unconventional thinking.
Deleted User wrote: » Where a double standard comes in is that you would have called off the wedding that SHE wanted to have - on her fathers say so because you wanted to bend to the will of her family. YOUR family however were against it but you vetoed their decision and went ahead regardless. Which means you offer yourself power to veto your families decision in the matter of marriage. But you also vetoed the same veto in your partner - in that had her family rejected you - she would not have had the power of veto that YOU exercised on YOUR families opinion. So it appears to be one rule for you - and one for her - and that rule is that you give yourself power of veto in both circumstances and deny it to her. Nice.