You don't marry one person; you marry three: the person you think they are, the person they are, and the person they are going to become as the result of being.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I only intended to be married one time. But marriages are made; they don't just happen. It takes two.
So I think you have to marry for the right reasons, and marry the right person.
It's silly that anyone in this world tells you that there are only certain people that can marry you.
In our monogamous part of the world, to marry means to halve one's rights and double one's duties.
I think every person deserves two marriages, because you may not get the first one right. You really never knew. That's why divorce is so big. We all want it to last, but that's not always the reality of it.
You have to want to be married to someone. You have to feel that reciprocated. Marriage for marriage's sake doesn't make any sense to me, and I found someone with whom I could put my money where my mouth is, I guess.
As individual people, embedded in our daily lives, of course we're interested in what makes one person different from another. We've got to hire one person and not another, marry one person and not another.
Don't marry the person you think you can live with; marry only the individual you think you can't live without.
Marriage is the torment of one, the felicity of two, the strife and enmity of three.
When two people marry they become in the eyes of the law one person, and that one person is the husband.