so, Iâve gotten this question and similar ones before, and I want to use it to go into what marriage actually is.
so, in law, there are a couple of legal assumptions made when someone is a close family member, like a parent. the assumptions are that this person knows you well enough to make decisions on your behalf in an emergency, supports or is supported by you financially, and, most importantly, that they are emotionally significant to you in a way that makes them different from a total stranger or a good friend. immigration law, for example, prioritizes families over people immigrating for jobs alone, because not getting a job doesnât have the same emotional weight as never seeing your mom again.
the difference is that you donât get to choose your family (outside of adoption and, uh, legally thatâs not a bilateral decision). you do get to choose your spouse. the fact that you chose them is why they get priority for things like inheritance and immigration, even over your parents or your siblings or your grandma.
how does the government know that this particular person is someone you want to have as part of your family? you fill out a form and you tell them.
what happens if you donât want them in your family anymore, and donât want those assumptions made about them? you fill out a different form and you tell the government that.
the thing I think thatâs hard for people to wrap their heads around â whether youâre a starry-eyed romantic or a pragmatic bitch like me â is that marriage isnât an announcement of how much you love someone. thatâs what a facebook status update is for. you do not need to be in love, or sexually/romantically monogamous, or be religious, or any of the other things people associate with marriage, in order to be married.
itâs a legal decision. it is choosing to get certain benefits (like taxes, because itâs assumed youâre financially supporting each other) in exchange for certain responsibilities (because itâs assumed youâre supporting each other, it stops mattering exactly who bought what after you got married, so divorce splits the whole pool of stuff even if one person bought like 75% of it).
you donât get the one without the other, and you donât get either if you donât affirmatively say thatâs what you want to have happen. it doesnât happen automatically, or in every romantic relationship no matter how serious, because the choice is the point.
and, to be clear: if you do not want, or do not care about, the legal rights and responsibilities of being married, you should not get married. itâs a fucking legal contract that has serious legal implications! itâs not something you should be doing for funsies!
tl;dr: if you want all the shit that comes with a marriage, good and bad, you need to tell the government thatâs what you want. if you donât want it, then you donât need to do it, but you need to also be aware of what youâre potentially losing (in exchange for what youâre keeping). that should be an informed decision, not one you make for emotional reasons like âI just want everyone to know Iâm only having sex with this person foreverâ or âour love is so pure it transcends legal boundaries.â