vampire retweetledi
vampire
3.3K posts

vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi

It used to be that marriage was the starting point.
Two people came together with almost nothing but each other, and they built everything side by side: careers, homes, families, dreams.
The process of building wasn’t just practical, it was bonding. It forged loyalty. It required sacrifice. It taught interdependence.
Today, we’re told to have it all before we marry.
A stable career. A house. A padded savings account. An identity rooted in independence.
By the time two people finally come together, they’ve spent years learning how to do life alone, how to protect themselves, prioritize themselves, rely only on themselves.
And now we wonder why it’s so hard to build a life with someone.
Marriage is no longer a beginning. It’s an accessory to an already-built life.
But two self-contained, self-sufficient lives do not easily merge.
There is no “ours”, now there is only “yours” and “mine.”
Individualism didn’t just redefine marriage.
Individualism is its death.

English
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi
vampire retweetledi





































