what age is considered an older single?

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  • #618183
    Sparkly
    Member

    what age is considered an older single?

    #1170402
    I. M. Shluffin
    Participant

    It depends. Older than what?

    #1170403
    Joseph
    Participant

    By the Chasidish, 22 and older.

    By the Litvish, 25 and older.

    By the MO, 26 and older.

    #1170404
    Sparkly
    Member

    Joseph – mo i think is more like 30 and older?

    i was talking bout yeshivish and chasidish. isnt it like 21 and older?

    #1170405
    Excellence
    Participant

    Og’s mother inlaw! Are you joking? You call 22 yo old for marriage?

    #1170406
    Meno
    Participant

    I think there’s a handbook of Jewish terminology in which this is defined, along with other common terms, such as mo, otd, etc.

    #1170407

    I can only speak for my circles and evwn within the chassidish community it’s all gonna be different from kj to Willy to bp

    And also between boys and girls it’s also different

    #1170408
    Sparkly
    Member

    Happygirlygirl – whats the norm within your circles?

    #1170409
    Joseph
    Participant

    Happygirl, what are the ages in your circles?

    #1170410
    gofish
    Member

    Joseph, I don’t know which MO and chassidish people you hang around with, but the ones I interact with have slightly different ranges.

    I was once by a chassidish family’s house – quite ‘with it’ people, not hardcore chassidish, and the mother was sighing sadly about her single nephew. “It’s heartbreaking!” were her exact words to describe his single status. I was thinking about her nephew, and pictured him as a 28 year old boy whose classmates were all married. Then she said, “How can he be twenty and still single? He has a heart of gold!” I was quite flabbergasted – talk about culture shock! When I asked, they told me that the boys in his class started getting engaged at 18, and now he was one of the last ones left.

    Based on other experiences, I do think that many chassidish people would start considering young adults “older” at 21. But it’s different in every circle, and if a girl is 20 but almost everyone in her grade is married, and some had already gotten engaged in 12th grade, then she would be considered “old” as well.

    As far as MO, most MO people I know are just starting to get married at 26, which means that it is hardly considered ‘old’.

    In case my quotation marks haven’t implied as much, I find this whole concept of 20 somethings being considered old ridiculous, but whatever.

    #1170411

    They’re considered “older,” not “old.”

    #1170412

    Okay so basically when I speak about my circles you have to understand one more thing that my family isn’t exactly the circles I’m talking about. My family isn’t the school I went to type….etc….so let’s talk about the circles I personally am in

    Girls start shidduchim 18 (some cases younger but very rare) and old would be considered 21 but still 18/19 is ideal

    Boys mostly start at 18 as well (basically never earlier) and ideal would be getting engaged by 20 but not considered old until 22+

    You have to understand the more chassidish the family the earlier these numbers go in kj/Monroe moms freak out if the boy is still 19 and not engaged…the yeshivah by 17 is full and the grade of 19 year olds is 3/4 gone

    #1170413
    zahavasdad
    Participant

    13 for a girl, 14 for a boy

    #1170414
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    40. Anyone under 40 is not an older single, IMHO. There is no right age to get married, especially for girls who have no chiyuv to get married (although it’s a Mitzvah if they do), and therefore can get married when they feel like it.

    On the other hand, boys have a chiyuv to get married as soon as they are mature enough, unless they are learning AND marriage will interfere with their learning. I think that even in that case, they are only allowed to push it off until 24, and nowadays, marriage is not necessarily an impediment to learning anyhow (although in some cases, it may be).

    Conclusion: For boys it’s 25 and for girls it’s 40.

    #1170415
    Excellence
    Participant

    Freak out if not engaged by 19? My gosh….

    I must remind myself not to judge. These must be closed communities who know nothing of the outside world. Each to their own. It’s not like a soul has the choice where and to who to be born to.

    All I can say is our Sydney community of orthodox Jews are completely different.

    I have to ask regardless… at 18 or 19 or 20, what livelihood do these very young newlyweds have to support a family? How can anyone afford anything? Nevermind, I probably won’t like the answer. 🙂

    #1170416
    Ex-CTLawyer
    Participant

    Joseph……In general I agree with your numbers. I would add 3 years in the Litvish and MO communities for those in Medical < Dental and Law schools…Perfectly acceptable to delay to finish a professional education.

    Our 4 child finished Law School in December. She had done a year of Seminary after High School before college, add 4 years college and then law school and she was 26 when she married just before Pesach. The new son in law is Litvish. He was also 26, they met in Law School, fixed up by a professor.

    #1170417
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    Excellence: “I must remind myself not to judge.”

    You don’t seem to be doing such a good job since your post sounds very judgmental. Tell you what, let’s make a deal: You won’t be judgmental of the communities in which getting married at 18 is considered ideal (as the Torah says) and we won’t be judgmental of the way things are done in Sydney.

    Why do people have such a hard time accepting the fact that different communities do things differently?

    #1170418
    Joseph
    Participant
    #1170419
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    From the above thread – Brooklyn yenta: “it’s not an age, it’s an attitude. there are those that are old at 21, and those that are young at 30.”

    I agree with that!

    #1170421

    Excellence- thing is by most typical chassidish people they don’t go to college anyway so if the girl has a job by 18 very likely she will still have the same job to support throughout the next few years….but basically most chassidish gurls have office jobs and teaching jobs and are not looking to further their education for a degree….so really why shouldn’t they get married theire lives won’t be different at 21 maybe more mature and the guys is the same thing ….so then simple answer to “why so young “is actually a question “why not”

    #1170422
    Sparkly
    Member

    Happygirlygirl – i agree. thats what i was saying about certain people. some people dont want to go to college because their too lazy and hate school and just want to get married and have kids.

    #1170423
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    Sparkly – It has nothing to do with laziness and that certainly was not Happygirlygirl’s point. Someone who is lazy would not get married at 18 and have a bunch of kids instead of going to college!!! You have to be extremely unlazy and hard-working to get married at 18 and have a bunch of kids!! On the other hand, a lazy person might ostensibly decide to go to college instead of getting married and raising kids!!

    Anyhow, they don’t go to college because there are hashkafa problems with going to college and because they think that mothers are supposed to take care of their kids instead of going out to work and leaving the kids with babysitters.

    I was very offended by your post even though I’m not Chassidish. Why is it necessary to insult people who do things differently than you?

    #1170424
    Sparkly
    Member

    lilmod ulelamaid – its MUCH HARDER to go to college than get married and have kids. any doctors to respond to this comment (specifically lady)? i still am having a debate and i think a frum lady doctor whos married with kids can answer which she thinks is harder to go to college and become a doctor or get married and have kids. you shouldnt be offended. its just a fact you cant get insulted by a fact.

    #1170425
    Meno
    Participant

    Sparkly,

    Having a good marriage and raising good kids takes a lot of hard work, and many more years than college, even medical school.

    #1170426
    gofish
    Member

    Sparkly, first get married and have children, then we’ll talk.

    I don’t think anyone who has been a parent would say such a comment, not even someone with three doctorates.

    #1170427
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    Sparkly – I spent many, many, years in school (at least 10 years including college and several years post-college) in very intense programs (probably the equivalent of medical school, but I don’t want to go into details). Prior to that, I spent a few years taking care of my younger siblings and the housework.

    So if anyone is qualified to answer, I am. It was WAY harder to take care of kids and run a household than it was to go to school!!!!

    #1170428
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    Sparkly, I don’t think you realized the connotation of what you wrote. Coming after Happygirlygirl’s post, the implication is that Chassidish girls don’t go to college because they are lazy which is far from the truth!

    #1170429
    Sparkly
    Member

    lilmod ulelamaid – what is your degree in? i thought you said that you didnt go to college until now?

    #1170430
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    I don’t think I said that. I am not so sure that I want to share too many personal details because it would be too easy for people to figure out who I am, and also, because there are things I don’t necessarily like to share even with people I know, since they can lead to wrong impressions.

    #1170431

    Most chassidish schools including the one I went to has a lady who is quite famous till not sure if I’m allowed to say who even though she’s goes around everywhere and she brings “proofs and stuff” why you’re not allowed to go to college from any sect of a judaism. She brings this whole argument about rabbi shamshon refael Hirsh zatzal sayinga that he only gave a heter for that generation and not for our current one….she leaves out crucial information regarding that debate and thus the girls really believe it is wrong (in any case many chassidish rebbes Dont allow cause they choose to be more isolated for theur belief is according to how much your brain is filled with gashmiyus you have that percent left for ruchniyus 75 percent gashmiyus results in 25 percent ruchniyus) another thing she quotes is that rabbi avigdor Miller zatzal says that if you hang your college degree/diploma you are openly saying “I want to a school that teaches apikursis and I’m proud of it” .I don’t know if any of what she said is true or if a part is but I do know not everything she said is true….it was more of a scaring method she even said there there no kosher alternative to a degree even through sara shenirer/tti/bulka/touro (even the bp ones)…so between listening to their father and rebbes andlistening to this lady talk most chassidish girl’s do not get a degree

    #1170432
    absan
    Participant

    Sparklysparkels there is a big difference between taking care of siblings then taking care of your own children. For your own children the mothers instincts and love towards them makes the work much easier ,although you can still become stressed but still no comparison.

    #1170433
    Sparkly
    Member

    absan – im the youngest in my family so i dont usually watch children unless im babysitting which is hardly. so basically im NEVER around little kids besides for like once in a blue moon. the last time i watched a child was over 3 years ago!!

    #1170434
    Meno
    Participant

    Sparkly,

    So basically you’re admitting that you have no idea what it’s like to take care of children, so you can’t possibly know that college is harder than raising children. Got it.

    #1170435
    Mammele
    Participant

    Absan and most others chiming in now: Mothers (usually) bear their children, they don’t just raise them. Taking this crucial component out of the equation seems blissfully ignorant. But the whole college versus mothering is just as ignorant. Sigh.

    #1170436
    🐵 ⌨ Gamanit
    Participant

    Those who are saying a mothers love makes it all easier are forgetting one crucial point. Being the mother means you can’t dump the child on the mother’s lap whenever you’ve had enough. While you do have a bit of a break between semesters if you’re in college being a mother is 24/7/52.

    As an older sibling I pitched in, sure, but when the going got too tough I could always go to my room, close the door and ignore. When I had my first I was about to say “Okay, here’s the baby. I’m going to sleep” and then realized- wait, I’m the mother. That’s my job.

    #1170437
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    Mammele – good point! And don’t forget about labor!

    #1170438
    Sparkly
    Member

    Meno – thats NOT what i meant. i meant that i think getting married and having kids is easier than medical school just by watching others and seeing what kind of times people have. i will know after im done with pharmacy school h’h because pharmacy school is almost as hard as medical school and i will h’h get married and have kids. but im guessing that i would be much happier getting married and having kids than going to college and becoming a doctor because its easier.

    #1170439
    Health
    Participant

    LU -“40. Anyone under 40 is not an older single, IMHO. There is no right age to get married, especially for girls who have no chiyuv to get married (although it’s a Mitzvah if they do), and therefore can get married when they feel like it.”

    Wrong! I started a topic called “Who wants to be a Tzaddikes like Rus”, over there I posted women do have a Chiyuv to get married!

    From the topic called “Who wants to be a Tzaddikes like Rus” – Joe posted -“So, yes, 22 is a bit early, and perhaps the more appropriate age is say 26-27 before a dose of reality needs to set it for the girls, but if we understand the age gap correctly, and if they don’t want to be left stranded to a life of being single, some of them will need to compromise both on the age issue and on the previously married issue. Both compromises will add more men to the pool for the girls who are stranded after the young guys are married.”

    #1170440
    allfreindly
    Participant

    ok. who is ready to give up their kids for college? I mean give up and just be single and a student. This will give us a clear answer.

    #1170441
    allfreindly
    Participant

    so if I am litvis I still have 5 years to go. Oh no I want to get married by 20.

    #1170442
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    allfriendly – sorry, but that wouldn’t answer the question

    #1170443
    Sparkly
    Member

    allfreindly – very funny. i didnt mean it like that. i meant that going to medical school for a single person is HARDER than being married with kids.

    Mammele – i think we need a mom doctor over here on this thread. im gonna ask someone i know if i ever get a chance about this thing whos a mother and a doctor.

    Gamanit – theres something called a babysitter. what did you consider an older single?

    Health – my issue is that the guys i want are in their young 20, in college, enjoying life, and want to wait like at least 1 more year to get married and then you have me waiting for them. and i think thats where the whole shidduch crisis thing sets in because guys making the girls wait.

    #1170444
    🍫Syag Lchochma
    Participant

    “allfreindly – i didnt mean it like that. i meant that going to medical school for a single person is HARDER than being married with kids.”

    ” its MUCH HARDER to go to college than get married and have kids. “

    “Meno – thats NOT what i meant. i meant that i think getting married and having kids is easier than medical school just by watching others and seeing what kind of times people have.”

    “im guessing that i would be much happier getting married and having kids than going to college and becoming a doctor because its easier.”

    We heard you. But nobody agrees with you. And you admit that you don’t even have any facts/experience to back up your claims.

    #1170445
    WinnieThePooh
    Participant

    Besides what everyone has sad, the difficult pregnancies, labor, post-partum, sleepless nights, taking care of sick kids, dealing with issues that kids might have as they get older, whether emotional, medical, learning etc etc, and the fact that you can never take time off from being a mother, all of which makes motherhood much more difficult than college, the big difference is that mothering is Real Life. If you mess up an assignment, did poorly on a test, had a bad day in college- while it may be devastating at the time, in the long run it does not really matter. But when raising kids, everything counts big time, for generations to come.

    This is coming from someone with advanced degrees who spent many years in college studying difficult subjects and is a mother.

    #1170446
    Sparkly
    Member

    WinnieThePooh – what do you consider advanced degrees? you did say you took organic chemistry and a and p but theres MUCH more to it than just that.

    #1170447
    Meno
    Participant

    Sparkly,

    You have made it very clear exactly what you mean. My response remains the same. You have no idea what it’s like to raise kids.

    #1170448
    WinnieThePooh
    Participant

    A degree is something you get when you finished the required coursework in a university program. undergraduate degree would be BA, BSc, BEd, etc. Advanced degree refers to a degree from a graduate level program- MSc, MD, PsyD, PhD etc.

    I mentioned those 2 courses because you asked about them…remember? I did not feel it necessary to list all courses I took during my lifetime in order to answer your question.

    #1170449
    huju
    Participant

    At what age should someone be self-supporting? And by self-supporting, I mean self and spouse and children.

    #1170450
    Meno
    Participant

    You should be self-supporting by the time you have a self (including self, spouse, and children) to support, whatever age that may be.

    #1170451
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    Meno, you have a self from the time you are born. No one is self-supporting then.

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