Category Archives: Marriage & Divorce

Society Says Women Should Marry But If We Don't Want To? – Star2.com

By Ms Kaur

Pola Singh’s article in StarLifestyle (“Uni is the best time and place to find your life partner”, Occasional Soapbox) got my attention. I respect his right to have an opinion, but the optics of the situation are complex and his perspective came across as oversimplified. This is my response to it.

I am a 40something Sikh woman. Single. Professional. Financially sound. Well-preserved physically. Emotionally and psychologically on firm ground. Mentally alert. From a traditional Sikh background. This is not a matrimonial ad. I’m giving you my background so you can get your bearings.

When my parents sent me to university to study, they gave me simple advice: study hard, abstain from bad habits, be wary of strangers, stay in touch with home. If I happened to meet a decent Sikh boy at uni who liked me as well, I was allowed to get to know him better provided I told my parents about him too.

That was liberal advice coming from traditional Sikh parents from a small town.

Why did my parents only want me to consider a Sikh boy? They believed (and I agreed) that the fewer cultural and religious differences a couple had, the fewer the chances of conflict or complications, since marriages always require significant adjustments even with the most culturally identical couples.

Sikhs are a minority anywhere. Initially, I kept an open mind about my uni mates. The few young men I met were not what I had expected. They smoked, drank excessive alcohol, some smoked marijuana while others did worse.

There were those who refused to talk to another Sikh girl for reasons I didn’t know. Some only wanted to date non-Sikh girls. Others who might have wanted to date Sikh girls expected sex in the back seat of their cars or in cheap hotels. My academic achievements were further deterrents to them. I could have dumbed down to seem more approachable but I chose not to do myself a disservice.

In summary, I did not meet a decent boy in my age group at university. So, what did I do in university, you may ask? I did what my parents sent me to do – study. I didn’t go all out in search of a spouse since I had not signed up for a bachelor’s degree in Husband Hunting.

Upon graduation, securing a job and working my way up in ranks, my luck in meeting suitable men did not improve. Striking a balance between the traits my family wanted in a man (rightfully so) and my wish to meet a person who liked me as much as I liked him turned out to be an elusive combination.

But like many women, I wanted a family of my own and to experience motherhood, and I was willing to put my career on hold to raise a family. I believed my true value was in the children I would raise, not the post I held.

I had hoped to meet a man who treated himself with the same respect and standards I accorded to myself. No smoking, no excessive alcohol consumption, etc, a university education, a steady job with a stable income. Someone with whom I felt I could comfortably share my thoughts with (“click”).

For me to complement their deficiencies in a way that they could complement mine. An equal partnership and a healthy compromise.

It didn’t help that society put pressure on me and labelled me (a term the writer used as well) “choosy” for having these expectations. It did not make sense to me – if I expected a man to set standards for himself that I had set for myself, wasn’t that called a level playing field? Being fair and being choosy are not the same thing.

The pressure of society that was quick to judge my “failings” (read: being “choosy”) eventually got the better of me. In my mid 30s, I married a Sikh man. Smoker. Less educated, much less financially able due to limited drive to improve himself. The “clicking”? I wasn’t too sure about that either.

To be blunt, I had become desperate. At that time, I believed society might be right about my “choosy” nature after all. No one was obligated to hold themselves to the same standards that I held myself to, were they? I needed to compromise, even if it meant I had to compromise far more than the other person.

Plus, the biological clock was ticking. Society NEVER lets a woman forget that. (Society often forgets to point out that sperm quality also declines with age. Interestingly, men are never thought to be desperate regardless of whatever age they decide to marry.)

My husband turned abusive very fast. A lot of it stemmed from his own insecurities. The marriage failed despite my best efforts. I, the educated, financially-independent woman, brought up in a stable and loving home, put up with his abuse because society drummed it into me that I would be alone for the rest of my life if I was “choosy”, but if I were to compromise, I would have a family and never feel alone. Some choice.

There is nothing choosy in wanting a man to hold the same values a woman does. If a man is unable to obtain those standards, it is not the woman’s fault for expecting him to be the best version of himself.

In fact, the deficiency lies in his inability to attain his true potential on his own. Contrary to popular belief, many women with a clear perspective are not in search of Mr Perfect, they are looking for Mr Right-For-Me.

I suppose I was never meant to be a mother despite my conviction that I would have been a good parent. But I am meant to be a daughter, and although I am not perfect, I try my best to be a good daughter.

I am not married but I am also not alone. I have a supportive family, a wonderful network of friends, and no dearth of activities to keep me busy and productive.

What advice would I give to those who have been blessed with children? Raise your sons as you would raise your daughters – as equals who are held to the same standards. Demand that every ounce of respect that they invest in someone is returned in equal measure.

And if your daughter does not find herself a man in university or get married and have her own family, it does not make her a disappointment. She is simply destined to take a different path in life.


Have something you feel strongly about? Get on your soapbox and preach to us at star2@thestar.com.my so that we can share it with the world in our Occasional Soapbox column.

Bachelor’s Catherine Giudici Gives Colton Underwood Her Best Advice: Don’t Watch the Season Together! – Us Weekly

Colton Underwood, listen up! As the only success story that has survived the Bachelor, Catherine Giudici has a lot of advice to dish out to the current Bachelor.

Catherine Giudici

 The graphic designer, 32, who was in New York to team up with FedEx, got engaged to fan-favorite Sean Lowe on the season 17 finale of the show 2013. The pair are about to celebrate their fifth wedding anniversary on January 26 and share two adorable sons – Samuel, 2, and Isaiah, 7 months. So how did they manage to be the sole survivors of the Bachelor series?  

For starters ­– leave the roses in Bachelor mansion. “If Sean Lowe bought me red roses, I would throw them in the trash. Over it,” the mom of two joked. From whether or not the former NFL star should watch the season back to how to deal with the gossip that will inevitably come out after the show, Giudici has all the answers in the video above.

Plus find out what life is really like dating after being on The Bachelor. 

The Bachelor airs on ABC Mondays at 8 p.m. ET.

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Everything we know about Chris Pratt's fiancee Katherine Schwarzenegger – USA TODAY

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The “Jurassic World” actor revealed the news on Instagram saying, “Sweet Katherine, so happy you said yes!” USA TODAY

Who is Katherine Schwarzenegger, Chris Pratt’s new fiancee? Doesn’t her name ring a bell?

Well, yes, she’s the eldest child of ex-“Terminator”-turned-former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and his estranged wife, former NBC correspondent Maria Shriver, and is thus a Kennedy clan member.

But she’s not an actor like “Jurassic World” star Pratt, 39, or her father, 71, (who has six movies in post-production, including a “Terminator reboot), or her younger brother, Patrick, 25, who has played roles in TV series like “Scream Queens” and “The Long Road Home.” 

The simple answer is how Schwarzenegger, 29, describes herself on Instagram: “Author, blogger, lover&addict of all things lifestyle,” it says, adding that she’s also an ambassador for the American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Dogs and other critters are familiar images on her Instagram. Now Pratt has joined the pantheon, along with her family, with a picture of the two and a gushy caption. “My sweet love. Wouldn’t want to live this life with anyone but you,” it read, followed by an engagement ring icon. 

According to her Amazon page, Schwarzenegger is the author of three books, two of them focused on self-help.

Her latest, the 2017 children’s book “Maverick and Me,” drew on her experience adopting a dog, Maverick, to create a picture book to introduce kids to the concept of “adopt, don’t shop” when it comes to pets.

Earlier, “Rock What You’ve Got: Secrets to Loving Your Inner and Outer Beauty From Someone Who’s Been There and Back,” came out in 2010; it’s an advice book for young women on how to develop a healthy body image. In grade school and middle school, Schwarzenegger suffered from body-image issues that she now controls with yoga and other exercise.

And “I Just Graduated … Now What?: Honest Answers From Those Who Have Been There” came out in 2014 and was targeted at recent college graduates uncertain about what to do next.

How did she meet Pratt? He was married for nine years, until 2018, to actress Anna Faris, 42, and they have a son, Jack, 6.

That’s something of a mystery but interest in their relationship started last summer. They first showed up in photos together in June 2018, when TMZ photographers spotted them on a picnic date in Santa Barbara, California, tooling around in his big red truck. 

Later, in August, they were seen together at Sunday church service and a family dinner, and in September they visited a farm and winery in Napa Valley

For Schwarzenegger’s birthday in December, the actor shared a loving post to Instagram with a collection of photos of the two of them goofing around.

“Happy Birthday Chief! Your smile lights up the room,” he said. “I’ve cherished our time together. Thrilled God put you in my life. Thankful for the laughs, kisses, talks, hikes, love and care.”

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Schwarzenegger graduated from the University of Southern California in 2012. She was at loose ends and ended up interviewing a variety of people, including actors and entrepreneurs, about what to do next for a career. Her second book grew out of those interviews, compiled as a survival guide for new grads.

Now she runs a lifestyle blog that covers health, beauty, home decor, animals, style and food.

Besides Patrick, her siblings include Christina, 27, and Christopher Schwarzenegger, 21, plus a half-brother, Joseph Baena, 21.

Her parents are legally separated but are not divorced. Their marriage fell apart in 2011 after it emerged that he had fathered a child with the family’s housekeeper. 

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Topic: Where are the marriage advice columns? – Yeshiva World News

The “Dear Abby” type of advice columns don’t seem especially appropriate for frum couples seeking advice on marriage issues. While it may sound trite, starting with your own rav/rebbitzen may provide a useful foundation for resolution of some issues but more importantly, they may refer you to a marriage counselor or therapist that himself/herself is frum or at least experienced In dealing with frum clients.