Oh this is a great set of questions. Harmony will prevail if the husband appreciates the value of church service and attendance. There is the possibility that she will wise up over time, but not likely. The brethren have taught that there is an ideal pattern for marriage. I'm glad you both have found a way to get past the incredible forces that are working against you. Communicate and get those answers, OP. Racial differences can be very trivialвthey really didn't come up much for my parents, for exampleвand are basically false differences. Here are a few questions you could ask her. It is not something that should be taken lightly.
Follow the footnotes and you start to find the lies. If she is still Mormon and you are not, she will always secretly hope that you convert, just like you will always secretly hope she leaves the church. You could even pass it off as you investigating the church and you stumnled accross these essays on lds. As ex-mormons, can anyone here offer some insight about this girl, her religion, and what exactly I may be getting myself into if I continue dating her. Living in an interfaith, marriage can be hell. No one could compare to the man I married. Let them explore and see the many people who love Heavenly Father and serve him with all their heart. All around me, I am being asked if I am ready to be a doctor's wife, and do I know what is expected of me. Mormons have separate congregations for young single adults, which is very convenient.
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As much as I want to share his brilliance and compassion with the world, I know that once he makes that connection with someone's sick parent, it is easily hrs less of our family time, and he won't even be treating them. Now I try to put myself in his shoes and he has always had a problem standing firm in any decision so its hard for him to say no. I can see how it would be easy to think wow, I'm not even worth 3 minutes of conversation and I don't want you to feel that way. This girl is also a real person, not a caricature of a cult member, and even if the ultimate result is a breakup, she deserves to be treated with compassion and respect.
By the time you are done, you'll have all of the basics down and will have the framework to know what to ask next without any confusion. After a certain point "support" stops being supportive and turns into enabling - enabling of his depression, his anxiety, his reluctance to reflect deeply on who he is and what he wants out of life, and worst of all, my "support" ensures his continuation into a career that will not ultimately make him or me happy. Forget what anyone else says or expects of you.