General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Unmarried are invisible, forgotten [View all]KitSileya
(4,035 posts)I was ever so glad a friend of mine got leave the day I had surgery so she could travel to the hospital and stay with me during the night (it was laparoscopic gallbladder removal, so I wasn't admitted, but stayed in the hospital hotel overnight.) My parents live an hour's plane ride away, and I simply do not have any family, at all, in the city where I'm now living. Luckily, in Norway we've got better rights when it comes to leave than pretty much anyone in the world; it shouldn't have surprised me as much as it did that she was granted leave.
I don't see myself marrying either, in the future, and am happy as a single 37-year old. Marriage to me is a very serious business, and as a practicing Catholic, not something entered into lightly. You need a round of classes first with your parish priest, where you have to discuss everything from child rearing to economic philosophy, which I think is very sensible. In addition, at least in my parish, with my very conservative parish priest, single life is *always* held up as equal and just as good as married life. Whenever they talk about family, and how you should interact with them, they talk about your relationship to your parents, spouses, children, and siblings, so everyone is included. In other words, we unmarried ones are not left out in the cold.