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K8-EEE

(15,667 posts)
4. Hmmm.....I don't think so.
Sat May 12, 2012, 01:13 PM
May 2012

Maybe a nominal fee for the classes, I just very much DID NOT want to take them. We had a 5 minute "ceremony" with just my parents between masses -- really I just wanted to placate my mom who was upset we weren't "really" married.

Actually I think the pre-marital counseling is probably not a bad idea. I remember this one very young couple (post high school) broke up during the counseling, I thought SHE really got her money's worth out of it. The hub to be was a football hunk but didn't talk much. They had questions like "what would you do if your wife gained weight' AND I WILL NEVER FORGET THIS -- they guy said he would drive his truck around and make her run after it until she lost the weight because if they were married her body was COMMUNITY PROPERTY and he would not put up with her "ruining it!" All the women in the class during the break were like, UM, ARE YOU SURE YOU WANT TO GO THROUGH WITH THIS? And in the end she did not.

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0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Did you have to pay for those classes? MADem May 2012 #1
Hmmm.....I don't think so. K8-EEE May 2012 #4
That sounds like an excellent class - too many dioceses hedgehog May 2012 #7
My daughter and her husband were married in the 1980s RebelOne May 2012 #2
The irony is that the husband will now have to get an annullment hedgehog May 2012 #8
Personally, I would never have done the classes in the first place. alarimer May 2012 #22
The Reichwing religionists are vying for control of the theocracy they are creating state by state freshwest May 2012 #3
Those classes are called Pre Cana and I will tell you this much I went through them. southernyankeebelle May 2012 #5
You are onto something there tabbycat31 May 2012 #14
Yes that would be good. But I tell you the Pre Cana classes are really good and everyone should southernyankeebelle May 2012 #17
It's the one-size-fits-all approach I have a problem with Retrograde May 2012 #25
Chile and Italy also do this. Civil marriage is the legal one. Religious is the sacramental one. SharonAnn May 2012 #27
Precisely. rug May 2012 #6
I don't like having to defend the Catholic Church but your story shows they are being snagglepuss May 2012 #9
You mentioned it in your post Retrograde May 2012 #10
LOL. Since the government, and not the RCC hifiguy May 2012 #11
Why we need a complete separation of church state nadinbrzezinski May 2012 #12
I am for the separation of church and hate ashling May 2012 #20
the catholic church does not recognize my marriage; I do not recognize the catholic church rurallib May 2012 #13
"Return" as in rejoin? Ilsa May 2012 #18
yeah - rejoin rurallib May 2012 #21
I don't blame you for being pissed. Ilsa May 2012 #26
Well, my parents were both dead by the time I was 25 rurallib May 2012 #29
This is what's good about that whole separation of church and state stuff.... wandy May 2012 #15
Why did you not tell the RCC to attempt aerial fornication? PavePusher May 2012 #16
Melodie and I were married ashling May 2012 #19
Simply because they have you and me looking at this "christian man and woman thing" rustydog May 2012 #23
Marriage is a sacrament of the church RB TexLa May 2012 #24
My thought to that would be that if my marriage didn't count then their opinion jp11 May 2012 #28
I choose to worship Thor tabasco May 2012 #30
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