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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper explores the benefits of remaining single, despite the pressures society puts on people to get married. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVSingle.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
fulfilling life without getting married. Discussion Marriage is a huge step; it still requires vows that commit people to one another until death. And yet, its proven impossible for half
of all married couples to keep those vows. According to many sources, the divorce rate is 50% and the number of people (both men and women) who cheat on their
spouse is even higher. So why do people rush into marriage? Many experts believe that society conditions people to feel they have to get married, and further, to expect that
their relationship will be the ideal one they see in movies and on television. There are also pressures from family and friends to get married and start a family. For
years, studies have supported the idea that married people are happier than singles; now new information has begun to refute those claims, and show that single people can be just
as fulfilled as their married counterparts. Among the findings of these studies are the fact that marriage "reduces social ties" (Jayson, 2007). Married couples tend to associate with other, similar
couples, and their social network diminishes accordingly. While studies show that married people experience a "boost in happiness," that jump "returns to pre-marriage levels over time" (Jayson, 2007). Also,
this same study reveals that people who never married reported the "highest rate of well-being" among all groups studied (Jayson, 2007). Anecdotal evidence suggests that the finding is true; a
woman named Lee Tunstall, who lives in Calgary, Canada, reporting feeling "left out" when her friends, all in their 20s and 30s, began getting married (Jayson, 2007). Today Tunstall is
42, still single, and says "I think I might have been the wise one" (Jayson, 2007). A.K. Boyle writes about the benefits of being unmarried, which are considerable. Boyle notes
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